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VA RESEARCH: HOT SPOTS WARN OF DIABETIC FOOT
ULCERS -- Diabetics, watch out: A hot spot on
your foot can
signal an ulcer is brewing, a wound that could
cost your limb.

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Story here...
http://ap.google.com/article/
ALeqM5hXimOgR_kgA3TViltW1o9PXuMdtwD8U5TFF00
Story below:
-------------------------
Hot Spots Warn of Diabetic Foot Ulcers
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
WASHINGTON (AP) — Diabetics, watch out: A hot spot on your foot can signal
an ulcer is brewing, a wound that could cost your limb. New research shows
that using a special thermometer to measure the temperature of their soles
can give patients enough early warning to avoid one of diabetes' most
intractable complications.
It's a simple-sounding protection for such a huge problem. Foot ulcers
each year strike 600,000 U.S. diabetics, people slow to notice they even
have a wound because diabetes has numbed their feet.
"They've lost the gift of pain," says Dr. David Armstrong of Chicago's
Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science, a diabetic foot
specialist.
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Worse, foot ulcers are so slow-healing and
vulnerable to infection that they're to blame for most of the roughly
80,000 amputations of toes, feet and lower legs that diabetics undergo
each year.
So word that an easy-to-use gadget could help is generating excitement.
Using the thermometer reduced by nearly two-thirds the number of high-risk
patients who got foot ulcers, Armstrong found in a study of 225 diabetic
veterans, the third in a series of government-funded research to back the
approach.
How does it work?
Inflammation goes along with tissue injury, and inflammation can be
measured by a bump in temperature. It's subtle — a minimum 4-degree
difference between, say, your right big toe and your left one that can
occur days before the skin breaks.
"A wound really will heat up before it breaks down," Armstrong explains.
Patients measure half a dozen spots on each foot. When the thermometer
signals a hot spot, they put up their feet for a day or so until the
temperature normalizes. Easing pressure before the skin cracks lets the
body heal more easily than it can with a full-blown wound.
"Heat is one of the most sensitive things, one of the first things that
happens when we begin to have tissue breakdown," says Dr. Crystal Holmes,
a University of Michigan podiatrist who has begun prescribing the
thermometers.
"It's looking positive that this sort of testing could be quite useful,"
adds Dr. Theresa Jones, who oversees research on diabetes complications at
the National Institutes of Health. "There isn't any other treatment one
knows about to (help) at that point before there's an ulcer."
This isn't a standard thermometer, but a $150 infrared one with a tip that
digitally measures skin temperature on contact.
Maker Xilas Medical, with an NIH grant, is working to make the thermometer
resemble a bathroom scale: Step up, and it would automatically flash any
trouble spots to the patient, and to a computer that alerts the doctor.
That's still a few years from market. For now, San Antonio-based Xilas
sells the handheld TempTouch by prescription only.
Insurance coverage is mixed. But, "how cheap compared to an amputation,"
says Dr. Mary Ann Banerji, who heads the State University of New York
Downstate Medical Center's diabetes center.
Treating a simple diabetic foot ulcer can cost $8,000, double that for an
infected one and even more for an amputation.
"It's basically idiot-proof," Walter Massa of Skokie, Ill., says of the
thermometer.
"On the other hand, it's very hard to take your temperature when you don't
think there's a problem there," cautions Massa, 53, who has used the
thermometer since Armstrong helped him narrowly avoid amputation when the
joints in his foot disintegrated. "There's something you have to teach
yourself."
Some 21 million Americans have diabetes, meaning their bodies can't
properly regulate blood sugar, or glucose. Over many years, high glucose
levels seriously damage blood vessels and nerves that lead to, among other
things, loss of sensation in the feet and poor blood flow in the lower
legs — the ulcer environment.
There is little therapy to avert foot ulcers. Patients are urged to wear
proper-fitting shoes and check their feet daily for redness, bumps or
other signs of trouble.
But day-to-day changes are hard to spot. In an NIH-funded study last year,
Texas A&M College of Medicine researchers reported 30 percent of patients
got ulcers even when using a mirror to check their soles, compared with
8.5 percent of thermometer users.
The new study, funded by the Department of Veterans Affairs and published
in last month's American Journal of Medicine, is the biggest yet, tracking
225 patients for 18 months. Some 12.2 percent who did standard feet checks
got ulcers, compared with 4.7 percent of thermometer users.
Participant Paul Rau of Green Valley, Ariz., had a recurring ulcer on his
left big toe for six years, a quarter-inch bone-deep hole that took weeks
to heal each time. While using the thermometer, Rau says his ulcer came
back far less frequently, and when it did it was a quick-healing shallow
crack.
"How it helped me was I checked my feet better," says Rau, 60. "There were
so many points on your feet you had to do."
While the results are compelling, the studies are small and NIH's Jones
says the thermometer should be included in larger studies to prove
long-term benefit.
EDITOR's NOTE _ Lauran Neergaard covers health and medical issues for The
Associated Press in Washington.
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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