newlifesurgery653@gmail.com
Phone : +919971662121
The best diabetic foot surgery is available at Newlife Surgery Clinic. Open wounds on the feet, or diabetic foot ulcers, are all too common in patients with poorly controlled blood sugar levels. In fact, 15% of diabetics will develop a foot ulcer, and 1 in 5 of those individuals will require hospitalization. Peripheral arterial disease and diabetic peripheral sensory neuropathy are two of the most prevalent disease processes that affect the feet in people with diabetes. Damage to the medium and small arteries, which supply blood and oxygen to the tissue in the feet, is referred to as a peripheral arterial disease. More than half of diabetics experience peripheral sensory neuropathy. People with neuropathy experience numbness, tingling, or the sensation that mud or a heavy stocking is caked on their feet. Neuropathy damages the nerves in the feet. Some people report having burning or shooting pains in their feet; these pains are frequently worse at night. Additionally, sensory neuropathy makes it possible for people to hurt their feet without realizing it. For instance, people who have diabetic sensory neuropathy run the risk of burning their feet when taking a hot bath or walking barefoot in the summertime on a hot sidewalk. Foot ulcers form when the skin on the bottom of the foot is repeatedly compressed or when friction from ill-fitting shoes rubs against the skin. Neuropathy prevents people from feeling the pain that would normally result from their shoes rubbing against their feet. Instead of feeling the ulcer, patients frequently learn they have one when blood stains on their stockings or the floor. Many diabetic patients experience neuropathy, so occasionally the wound goes unnoticed until it enlarges or becomes infected. Adult foot infections are most frequently caused by foot ulcers. Patients with diabetes frequently need to amputate a toe, foot, or leg due to ulceration, nerve damage, infection, and poor blood flow to the foot. Diabetes ulcers can develop into chronic, non-healing wounds that last for years. Once you've had one, you're more likely to get another because the ulcers can sometimes heal but come back in the same place. Receiving specialized foot care is essential for maintaining both your general health and your foot. To lower the risk of re-ulceration, many facilities provide special footwear and insoles, diabetes education, and regular foot exams.
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