*Department of Prosthetics and Orthotics, Faculty of Medicine and Health, Örebro University, Örebro, Sweden.
†University Health Care Research Center, Faculty of Medicine and Health, Örebro University, Örebro, Sweden.
J Am Podiatr Med Assoc. 2023 Jan-Feb;113(1). doi: 10.7547/21-027.
People at risk for diabetic foot ulcer (DFU) often misunderstand why foot ulcers develop and what self-care strategies may help prevent them. The etiology of DFU is complex and difficult to communicate to patients, which may hinder effective self-care. Thus, we propose a simplified model of DFU etiology and prevention to aid communication with patients. The Fragile Feet & Trivial Trauma model focuses on two broad sets of risk factors: predisposing and precipitating. Predisposing risk factors (eg, neuropathy, angiopathy, and foot deformity) are usually lifelong and result in "fragile feet." Precipitating risk factors are usually different forms of everyday trauma (eg, mechanical, thermal, and chemical) and can be summarized as "trivial trauma." We suggest that the clinician consider discussing this model with their patient in three steps: 1) explain how a patient's specific predisposing risk factors result in fragile feet for the rest of life, 2) explain how specific risk factors in a patient's environment can be the trivial trauma that triggers development of a DFU, and 3) discuss and agree on with the patient measures to reduce the fragility of the feet (eg, vascular surgery) and prevent trivial trauma (eg, wear therapeutic footwear). By this, the model supports the communication of two essential messages: that patients may have a lifelong risk of ulceration but that there are health-care interventions and self-care practices that can reduce these risks. The Fragile Feet & Trivial Trauma model is a promising tool for aiding communication of foot ulcer etiology to patients. Future studies should investigate whether using the model results in improved patient understanding and self-care and, in turn, contributes to lower ulceration rates.
患有糖尿病足溃疡(DFU)风险的人常常误解溃疡是如何发生的,以及哪些自我护理策略可能有助于预防溃疡。DFU 的病因复杂,难以向患者解释清楚,这可能会阻碍有效的自我护理。因此,我们提出了一个简化的 DFU 病因和预防模型,以帮助与患者进行沟通。“脆弱的足部和微不足道的创伤”模型主要关注两组广泛的风险因素:易患因素和诱发因素。易患因素(如神经病变、血管病变和足部畸形)通常是终身的,导致“脆弱的足部”。诱发因素通常是日常生活中不同形式的创伤(如机械、热和化学创伤),可以概括为“微不足道的创伤”。我们建议临床医生分三步与患者讨论该模型:1)解释患者特定的易患因素如何导致余生的脆弱足部,2)解释患者环境中的特定风险因素如何成为引发 DFU 的微不足道的创伤,3)与患者讨论并达成减少足部脆弱性的措施(如血管手术)和预防微不足道的创伤(如穿治疗性鞋具)。通过这种方式,该模型支持传达两个重要信息:患者可能存在终生溃疡风险,但存在医疗保健干预措施和自我护理实践可以降低这些风险。“脆弱的足部和微不足道的创伤”模型是帮助向患者传达足部溃疡病因的有前途的工具。未来的研究应调查使用该模型是否会导致患者更好地理解和自我护理,从而降低溃疡发生率。