Journal of Health Sciences and Medicine

Journal of Health Sciences and Medicine

An evaluation of risk factors affecting amputation in patients with diabetic foot Infection

Yazarlar: Handan ALAY, Sinan YILMAZ, Fatma KESMEZ CAN, Mehmet PARLAK

Cilt 4 , Sayı 1 , 2021 , Sayfalar 49 - 54

Konular:Sağlık Bilimleri ve Hizmetleri

DOI:10.32322/jhsm.809986

Anahtar Kelimeler:Diabetic foot,Amputation,Risk factors,Infection,Multidrug resistance

Özet: Introduction: Diabetic foot infections are one of the most common complications of diabetes and generally result in lower extremity amputations. Aim: The purpose of this study is to investigate risk factors affecting amputation in patients diagnosed with diabetic foot ulcer. Materials and Methods: This prospective cohort study involved 137 patients diagnosed with diabetic foot infection in a university hospital diabetic foot clinic. Results: The mean age of the participants was 60.5±10.1 years, and 70.8% (n=97) were men. The majority of patients (62.0%) were educated to elementary or middle school level, while 26.3% were illiterate. Mean duration of diabetes was 13.3±6.2 years. Hypertension was present in 48.2% of patients, hypercholesterolemia in 31.4%, cardiovascular disease (CVD) in 38%, peripheral artery disease (PAD) in 21.2%, peripheral venous insufficiency in 10.2%, and polyneuropathy in 70.1%, and 9.5% were receiving hemodialysis. According to the Infectious Diseases Society of America classification, moderate foot ulcers were present in 60.6% of patients, mild ulcers in 34.3%, and severe ulcers in 5.1%. Forty-six percent of patients were diagnosed with osteomyelitis during follow-up. Amputation was present in 28.5% (n=39) of the patients followed-up due to foot ulcers. PAD increased the risk of amputation 2.7-fold (95% CI: 1.02-7.14), osteomyelitis 2.6-fold (95% CI: 1.10-6.16), and repeated hospitalizations 5.9-fold (95% CI: 2.25-15.33). Growth was observed in 72.6% of patients without amputation, 76.5% were polymicrobial, and 65.9% of antibiogram results were multidrug resistant. No significant difference was observed among the patients in terms of multidrug resistance (p=0.468). Conclusion: PAD, osteomyelitis, and history of repeated hospitalizations are separate risk factors for amputation in patients with diabetic foot ulcers.


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@article{2021, title={An evaluation of risk factors affecting amputation in patients with diabetic foot Infection}, volume={4}, number={49–54}, publisher={Journal of Health Sciences and Medicine}, author={Handan ALAY,Sinan YILMAZ,Fatma KESMEZ CAN,Mehmet PARLAK}, year={2021} }
APA
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Handan ALAY,Sinan YILMAZ,Fatma KESMEZ CAN,Mehmet PARLAK. (2021). An evaluation of risk factors affecting amputation in patients with diabetic foot Infection (Vol. 4). Vol. 4. Journal of Health Sciences and Medicine.
MLA
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Handan ALAY,Sinan YILMAZ,Fatma KESMEZ CAN,Mehmet PARLAK. An Evaluation of Risk Factors Affecting Amputation in Patients with Diabetic Foot Infection. no. 49–54, Journal of Health Sciences and Medicine, 2021.