Escola Superior de Saúde, Universidade Fernando Pessoa, Porto, Portugal. LABIOMEP, INEGI-LAETA, Faculdade de Desporto, Universidade do Porto, Porto, Portugal. Author to whom any correspondence should be addressed.
Physiol Meas. 2019 Aug 2;40(7):074007. doi: 10.1088/1361-6579/ab2f03.
The role of skin temperature and soft tissue hardness in the development of plantar ulcers is still in debate. However, the relationship between skin temperature and soft tissue hardness has not been explored. This study intends to analyse an eventual association between skin temperature and soft tissue hardness in the foot of diabetic patients Approach: Twenty diabetic patients enrolled for this study. The analysis was done at the foot level, therefore, skin temperature and soft tissue hardness data of the plantar surface of 40 feet were obtained in eight regions of the foot, two in the heel, two in the midfoot, three in the forefoot and one in the hallux. Information regarding glycaemic control (HbA1c levels) was retrieved from the clinical records of the patients.
After averaging skin temperature and soft tissue hardness in the calcaneum (medial and lateral), in the midfoot (medial and lateral) and in the metatarsal head (1st, 2nd-3rd and 4th-5th), a negative, moderate and significant association was found between skin temperature and soft tissue hardness in the metatarsal head (rho = -0.553; p < 0.001), a positive, low and significant association was found in the midfoot (rho = 0.333; p = 0.036), but no association was found in the heel. The multiple linear regression models with skin temperature as dependent variable and soft tissue hardness as predictor were statistically significant in the metatarsal heads and midfoot, and explained 28.8% (R = 0.288, F = 15.37, p < 0.001) and 11.9% (R = 0.119, F = 5.151, p = 0.029) of the variance in skin temperature, respectively.
Skin temperature is negatively associated with soft tissue hardness in the metatarsal head region and positively associated with soft tissue hardness in the midfoot. These findings imply that soft tissue hardness should be considered in the assessment of diabetic foot patients and that this variable should be controlled in studies assessing the determinants of foot skin temperature.
皮肤温度和软组织硬度在足底溃疡发展中的作用仍存在争议。然而,皮肤温度和软组织硬度之间的关系尚未得到探索。本研究旨在分析糖尿病患者足部皮肤温度和软组织硬度之间是否存在关联。
本研究纳入了 20 名糖尿病患者。分析在足部水平进行,因此,我们获得了 40 只足部 8 个区域(足跟 2 个,中足 2 个,前足 3 个,大脚趾 1 个)的足底表面的皮肤温度和软组织硬度数据。从患者的临床记录中获取了血糖控制(HbA1c 水平)信息。
在平均足跟(内侧和外侧)、中足(内侧和外侧)和跖骨头部(1 、2-3 和 4-5)的皮肤温度和软组织硬度后,发现跖骨头部的皮肤温度和软组织硬度之间存在负相关、中度和显著关联(rho=−0.553;p<0.001),中足之间存在正相关、低度和显著关联(rho=0.333;p=0.036),但足跟之间无关联。以皮肤温度为因变量、软组织硬度为预测因子的多元线性回归模型在跖骨头部和中足均具有统计学意义,分别解释了 28.8%(R²=0.288,F=15.37,p<0.001)和 11.9%(R²=0.119,F=5.151,p=0.029)的皮肤温度方差。
皮肤温度与跖骨头部的软组织硬度呈负相关,与中足的软组织硬度呈正相关。这些发现表明,在评估糖尿病足患者时应考虑软组织硬度,并且在评估足部皮肤温度决定因素的研究中应控制该变量。