Gill G V, Famuyiwa O O, Rolfe M, Archibald L K
University Clinical Departments, Fazakerley Hospital, Liverpool, UK.
Diabet Med. 1998 Oct;15(10):858-62. doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1096-9136(199810)15:10<858::AID-DIA698>3.0.CO;2-Z.
Infection in the extremities of diabetic patients most commonly involves the feet and, at least in western societies, is often associated with chronic complications of diabetes. Severe hand infection, often culminating in amputation and even death, is, however, well-described in tropical countries, where it may not be associated with any evidence of neuropathy or arterial insufficiency. Similar cases are described in the western literature but are more often associated with more severe antecedent trauma. The literature describing hand sepsis in diabetic patients both in tropical and in western practice is reviewed and we draw some conclusions about pathogenesis and treatment from the literature and from original data documenting the varying experience of hand sepsis in diabetic practice throughout Africa.
糖尿病患者的肢体感染最常累及足部,至少在西方社会,常与糖尿病的慢性并发症相关。然而,在热带国家,严重的手部感染很常见,常以截肢甚至死亡告终,且可能与任何神经病变或动脉供血不足的证据无关。西方文献中也描述了类似病例,但更多与更严重的先前创伤有关。本文回顾了热带地区和西方实践中有关糖尿病患者手部脓毒症的文献,并从文献以及记录非洲各地糖尿病实践中手部脓毒症不同经验的原始数据中得出了一些关于发病机制和治疗的结论。