2006
DOI: 10.1016/s1067-2516(07)60001-5
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Diabetic Foot Disorders: A Clinical Practice Guideline (2006 Revision)

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Cited by 783 publications
(738 citation statements)
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References 435 publications
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“…sensory neuropathy, vascular insufficiency, immunopathy and metabolic perturbations) can predispose these patients to infections [5,6]. SSTIs are more common and more severe in diabetic than in non-diabetic patients and constitute a leading cause of hospitalisation [7]. The risk of SSTI-related hospitalisation is more than twice as high in diabetic than in non-diabetic patients [8].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…sensory neuropathy, vascular insufficiency, immunopathy and metabolic perturbations) can predispose these patients to infections [5,6]. SSTIs are more common and more severe in diabetic than in non-diabetic patients and constitute a leading cause of hospitalisation [7]. The risk of SSTI-related hospitalisation is more than twice as high in diabetic than in non-diabetic patients [8].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Diabetes is independently associated with increased emergency department visits for SSTIs [9], longer hospital stays [8] and infection-attributable death [10,11]. The rising prevalence of diabetes [7,12] is likely to cause increasing numbers of diabetes-related SSTIs in hospitalised patients.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…7 Bjarnsholt T and et al said that pseudomonas plays the important role in diabetic foot infection. 8 George et al stated that diabetes accounts for up to 50 per cent of non-traumatic leg amputations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It was also found that among nail infected participants (n =73), 50.7% visit a doctor for their nail infection and out of this, 68.4% of them were treating the infected nail with prescribed medicine. 45 out of the 73 participants having nail infection revealed neglecting their treatment follow-up suggesting that these participants were unaware of the consequence of the nail infection if left untreated over a long period which may lead to complications ranging from gangrene to amputation [30]. Interestingly, 56.1% of the subject would be willing to pay for a cure while 71% of participants were still willing to pay for a cure even if the treatment would be costly showing that cost was not a factor from preventing them seeking medical help.…”
Section: Level Of Awareness Of Participants Towards Nail Infectionmentioning
confidence: 99%