Fernando Malindu E, Crowther Robert G, Lazzarini Peter A, Sangla Kunwarjit S, Wearing Scott, Buttner Petra, Golledge Jonathan
Vascular Biology Unit, Queensland Research Centre for Peripheral Vascular Disease, College of Medicine and Dentistry, James Cook University, Townsville, Qld, 4814, Australia.
Podiatry Service, Townsville Community Health Service , Townsville, QLD, Australia.
BMC Endocr Disord. 2016 Sep 15;16(1):51. doi: 10.1186/s12902-016-0131-9.
Current international guidelines advocate achieving at least a 30 % reduction in maximum plantar pressure to reduce the risk of foot ulcers in people with diabetes. However, whether plantar pressures differ in cases with foot ulcers to controls without ulcers is not clear. The aim of this study was to assess if plantar pressures were higher in patients with active plantar diabetic foot ulcers (cases) compared to patients with diabetes without a foot ulcer history (diabetes controls) and people without diabetes or a foot ulcer history (healthy controls).
Twenty-one cases with diabetic foot ulcers, 69 diabetes controls and 56 healthy controls were recruited for this case-control study. Plantar pressures at ten sites on both feet and stance phase duration were measured using a pre-established protocol. Primary outcomes were mean peak plantar pressure, pressure-time integral and stance phase duration. Non-parametric analyses were used with Holm's correction to correct for multiple testing. Binary logistic regression models were used to adjust outcomes for age, sex and body mass index. Median differences with 95 % confidence intervals and Cohen's d values (standardised mean difference) were reported for all significant outcomes.
The majority of ulcers were located on the plantar surface of the hallux and toes. When adjusted for age, sex and body mass index, the mean peak plantar pressure and pressure-time integral of toes and the mid-foot were significantly higher in cases compared to diabetes and healthy controls (p < 0.05). The stance phase duration was also significantly higher in cases compared to both control groups (p < 0.05). The main limitations of the study were the small number of cases studied and the inability to adjust analyses for multiple factors.
This study shows that plantar pressures are higher in cases with active diabetic foot ulcers despite having a longer stance phase duration which would be expected to lower plantar pressure. Whether plantar pressure changes can predict ulcer healing should be the focus of future research. These results highlight the importance of offloading feet during active ulceration in addition to before ulceration.
当前国际指南提倡将最大足底压力至少降低30%,以降低糖尿病患者足部溃疡的风险。然而,足部溃疡患者与无溃疡对照者的足底压力是否存在差异尚不清楚。本研究的目的是评估与无足部溃疡病史的糖尿病患者(糖尿病对照组)和无糖尿病或足部溃疡病史的人(健康对照组)相比,患有活动性足底糖尿病足溃疡的患者(病例组)的足底压力是否更高。
本病例对照研究招募了21例糖尿病足溃疡患者、69例糖尿病对照组和56例健康对照组。使用既定方案测量双足足底10个部位的足底压力和站立期时长。主要结局指标为平均峰值足底压力、压力-时间积分和站立期时长。采用非参数分析并进行霍尔姆校正以校正多重检验。使用二元逻辑回归模型对年龄、性别和体重指数进行结局指标调整。报告所有显著结局的中位数差异及95%置信区间和科恩d值(标准化均值差异)。
大多数溃疡位于拇趾和脚趾的足底表面。在对年龄、性别和体重指数进行调整后,病例组的脚趾和足中部的平均峰值足底压力和压力-时间积分显著高于糖尿病对照组和健康对照组(p<0.05)。病例组的站立期时长也显著高于两个对照组(p<0.05)。本研究的主要局限性在于研究的病例数量较少,且无法对多种因素进行分析调整。
本研究表明,尽管患有活动性糖尿病足溃疡的患者站立期时长较长,而这通常预期会降低足底压力,但他们的足底压力更高。足底压力变化是否能够预测溃疡愈合应是未来研究的重点。这些结果突出了在溃疡活动期以及溃疡发生前减轻足部负荷的重要性。