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FOOT ULCERS

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FOOT ULCERS. Dr.B.BALAGOBI Registrar/Surgery. Chronic Foot ulcers. Diabetic ulcer Vascular Arterial Venous Infection:COM Malignant. Arterial ulcers . Pulse evaluations . Neuropathic ulcers . Neuropathic ulcers. OSTEOMYLITIS. Pathogenesis. Venous Arterial Neuropathic. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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FOOT ULCERS Dr.B.BALAGOBI Registrar/Surgery
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FOOT ULCERS

Dr.B.BALAGOBIRegistrar/Surgery

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Chronic Foot ulcers

• Diabetic ulcer• Vascular– Arterial– Venous

• Infection:COM• Malignant

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Arterial ulcers

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Pulse evaluations

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Neuropathic ulcers

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Neuropathic ulcers

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OSTEOMYLITIS

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Pathogenesis

Venous Arterial Neuropathic

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Treatment:Venous ulcer

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VV Treatment

Surgical• V Vs surgery:– High tie– Stripping– Perforators ligation– Multiple avulsions

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Treatment:Arterial ulcer

• Arterial bypass.• Debridment.• Skin Graft.

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Arterial Bypass

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Skin graft

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Treatment:Neuropathic ulcers

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Off load the pressure !

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Wound dressing

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BASICS

• Treat the aetiology– Hb– FBS control– Vit C,Zn– Protein– Respect VIP• Vascular• Infection• Pressure

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Methodes of Debridement

• Surgery• Hydro therapy• Biological:Maggots• Enzymatic:Proteolytic enzyme• Autolytic:Hydrogel

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Surgical debridement

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Bedside procedure

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Mechanical

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Debridement

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Maggots

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Reduce bacterial load

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Moisture

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VAC therapy

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VAC

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VAC

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VERY TASTY!!!!!!

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Diabetic Foot ulcer

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Latest Figures • Prevalence for Sri Lankans aged ≥20 years –

10.3%• Prevalence of pre-diabetes in urban and rural

population was 11.5% • Overall prevalence of some form of dysglycaemia

(sugar problems) was 21.8%

2008*- Katulanda P. Constantine G.R. , Mahesh J. G. etal., Prevalence and projections of diabetes and pre-diabetes in adults in Sri Lanka- Sri Lanka Diabetes , Cardiovascular Study (SLDCS)

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Epidemiology• DM largest cause of neuropathy• Half don’t know• Foot ulcerations is most common cause of hospital

admissions for Diabetics.• Expensive to treat• may lead to amputation.

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Pathophysiology• Vascular disease• Neuropathy– Sensory– Motor Foot deformities– Autonomic

• Hyperglycaemia• Immune deficiency

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STAGES OF ULCER DEVELOPMENT

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STAGES OF ULCER DEVELOPMENT

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RISK STRATIFICATION

• Previous ulceration/Amputation• Sensory neuropathy• Foot deformities/Callous• PVD

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RISK STRATIFICATION

• Low risk– no risk factors and no previous ulceration

• High risk – one risk factor and no previous ulceration

• Foot emergencies – ulcerated, injured or infected foot

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10g Monofilament-Sensory Examination

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Corns

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Callous

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HALLUX

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HAMMERTOES

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Footwear

• Match to the shape of the foot– Room for breathing & movement– Accommodate foot deformities

• Modification of foot wear– Insert cushioned insoles

• Offload pressure areas

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Evidence-based decisions for local & systemic wound care

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Paper accepted 12 April 2012Published online 6 July 2012 in Wiley Online Library (www.bjs.co.uk)

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Background

• CommonQOL, pain and cost.• Decisions vary among surgeons and are

frequently based on expert opinion. • literature on wound care, often showing

conflicting results.• The aim of this review was to compile best

available evidence from systematic reviews.

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Methods

• For this review, All systematic reviews in the Cochrane Database up to June 2011 on local and systemic wound care were included.

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systematic review

• is a literature review focused on a research question that tries to identify, appraise, select and synthesize all high quality research evidence relevant to that question.

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Methods

• For this review, All systematic reviews in the Cochrane Database up to June 2011 on local and systemic wound care were included.

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• 109 evidence based conclusions: – 30 on venous ulcers– 30 on acute wounds(Traumatic and surgical wounds)

– 15 on pressure ulcers– 14 on diabetic ulcers– 12 on arterial ulcers– 8 on miscellaneous chronic wounds.

• Systemic reviews were retrieved and screened independently by two researchers, and by a third in case of any disagreement.

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RESULTS• Findings were placed into five categories,

based on – Strong evidence of effect– Strong evidence of no effect– limited evidence of effect– limited evidence of no effect – no evidence either way

• A total of 33 conclusions with strong evidence of effect and 18 conclusions with fairly strong evidence of effect could be drawn from the CSR.

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Acute wounds: conclusions with strong evidence of effect

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Acute wounds

• Using antibiotics to prevent infections after dog bites is ineffective unless the bites are on the hands.

• Cleansing pin site orthopaedic fixators wounds using saline, alcohol, hydrogen peroxide or antibacterial soap to prevent infections is no more effective than no cleansing.

• Systemic treatment with therapeutic touch does not have any additional effect on wound healing compared to placebo or non-treatment after minor surgery.

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Acute wounds

• Topical honey reduces wound healing time when compared to film or gauze-based dressings for burns.

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Healing Wounds and other Health Conditions with Honey

• produced hydrogen peroxide that is responsible for the antimicrobial activity of all honey.

• effective against antibiotic-resistant strains of bacteria.

• Unlike other topical antimicrobial agents used on wounds, Manuka honey does not slow the healing.

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Acute wounds

• Silver sulfadiazine should not be used for burns as trials show this can delay wound healing and increase pain and infection rates.

• Drinking quality tap water is better for cleansing lacerations and acute soft tissue wounds than sterile saline solutions.

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Acute wounds• No difference between sutures, adhesive

tape and tissue adhesives for wound healing.

• Less erythema and pain when using tissue adhesives compared with standard wound care

• Tissue adhesives are a reasonable alternative to close traumatic lacerations, despite a slightly increased rate of wound dehiscence

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Venous ulcer: conclusions with strong evidence of effect

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Venous ulcers

• Pentoxifylline was strongly effective in promoting wound healing compared with placebo, in combination with compression therapy.

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Pentoxifylline

•It is used to treat intermittent claudication.•is a competitive nonselective phosphodiesterase inhibitor.•Which raises intracellular cAMP, activates PKA, inhibits TNF and leukotriene synthesis.•Improves red blood cell deformability,reduces blood viscosity and decreases the potential for platelet aggregation and thrombus formation.

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Venous ulcers

• Oral zinc was strongly ineffective for ulcer healing compared with placebo.

• no antimicrobial drug should be used without evidence of colonization or infection.

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Venous ulcers• Strong evidence of effect was shown for high

compression versus low compression, whereas elastic bandages were more effective than inelastic bandages.

• Limited evidence of effect is available for the following local antimicrobial therapies in addition to compression therapy to increase healing rates.(iodine, hydrocolloid)

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High compression elastic bandages.

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Venous ulcer

• Type of wound dressing beneath compression does not influence healing (trials included hydrocolloids, foam dressings, alginates,low-adherent dressings and hydrogels)

• Lidocaine–prilocaine cream decreases pain during ulcer dressings (not clear whether this affects healing)

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Diabetic ulcer: conclusions with strong evidence of effect

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Diabetic ulcers

• Using hyperbaric oxygen therapy decreases major amputations in diabetic.

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hyperbaric oxygen therapy

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Diabetic ulcers

• There is strong evidence of benefit for the local application of hydrogels after debridement compared with standard treatment after debridement, gauze-based dressings or standard care to promote wound healing.

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Hydrogel dressing

• is designed to hold moisture in the surface of the wound,.

• providing the ideal environment for both cleaning the wound, and allowing the body to rid itself of necrotic tissue.

• The moisture in the wound is also essential in pain management for the patient, and these dressings are very soothing and cooling.

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Hydrogels dressing

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Diabetic ulcer

• Surgical or larval debridement may decrease healing time comparedwith conventional treatment or hydrogel(Small study)

• No eligible studies identified so no evidence for effectiveness of silver-based wound dressings

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Arterial ulcer: conclusions with strong evidence of effect

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Arterial ulcers

• Systemic prostanoids should be used to relieve rest pain and improve ulcer healing in patients with critical leg ischaemia.

• Oral iloprost reduces amputation.

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Prostanoids

•Iloprost is a synthetic analogue of prostacyclin PGI2.• Iloprost dilates systemic and pulmonary arterial vascular beds.• It also affects platelet aggregation

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Arterial ulcers

• Spinal cord stimulation improves limb salvage.

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Arterial ulcer

• Primary graft patency was higher compared with PTA after 1 year.

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Pressure ulcer: conclusions with strong evidence of effect

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Pressure ulcers

• Using high-specification foam mattresses and low air loss mattresses can prevent pressure ulcers on the ward and pressure-relieving overlays are recommended on operation tables.

• Using local therapeutic ultrasound is not recommended for healing pressure ulcers.

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Foam mattresses

• The Memory Mattress is made from unique upper layer of high density visco-elastic polymer gel.

• Originally designed for NASA missions, it is soft and pliable following the outline of your body perfectly.

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Foam mattresses

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Foam mattresses

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CONCLUSION

• "Ideally wound treatment decisions should be based on the best available evidence, integrated with patients' concerns and priorities and fine-tuned by the local resources and skills”

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THANK YOU


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