newlifesurgery653@gmail.com
Phone : +919971662121
Newlife Surgery Clinic offers the best diabetic foot surgery. Patients with poorly controlled blood sugar levels are far too likely to develop open wounds on their feet, also known as diabetic foot ulcers. In actuality, 15% of diabetics will get a foot ulcer, and 1 in 5 of those people will need to stay in the hospital. Two of the most common diseases that affect the feet in diabetics are peripheral arterial disease and diabetic peripheral sensory neuropathy. Peripheral arterial disease is damage to the medium and small arteries, which supply blood and oxygen to the tissue in the feet. Peripheral sensory neuropathy affects more than half of diabetics. Numbness, tingling, or the impression that mud or a bulky stocking is caked on a person's feet are all symptoms of neuropathy. The nerves in the feet are harmed by neuropathy. Some individuals claim to experience shooting or burning pains in their feet, which are frequently worse at night. In addition, sensory neuropathy makes it possible for people to experience foot pain covertly. When taking a hot bath or strolling barefoot in the summer on a hot sidewalk, for example, people with diabetic sensory neuropathy run the risk of burning their feet. Foot ulcers develop when friction from ill-fitting shoes rubs against the skin on the bottom of the foot or when the skin is repeatedly compressed. People with neuropathy are unable to feel the discomfort that would result from their shoes rubbing against their feet. Patients frequently discover they have an ulcer when blood stains appear on their stockings or the floor rather than feeling the ulcer. Because neuropathy affects many diabetic patients, sometimes a wound goes unnoticed until it enlarges or becomes infected. Foot ulcers are the most common reason for adult foot infections. Due to ulceration, nerve damage, infection, and inadequate blood flow to the foot, patients with diabetes frequently require the amputation of a toe, foot, or leg. Diabetes ulcers have the potential to become long-lasting, chronic wounds that do not heal. Once you've had one, you're more likely to experience another since ulcers occasionally heal but recur in the same location. It's crucial to get specialized foot care if you want to keep both your general health and your feet healthy. Numerous facilities offer special shoes and insoles, diabetes education, and routine foot exams to reduce the risk of re-ulceration.
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