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Title: AOFAS MEETING: Foot Surgery Can Lead To Bone Degeneration In Diabetic Patients
URL: http://www.pslgroup.com/dg/E22D2.htm
Doctor's Guide
February 8, 1999


ANAHEIM, CA -- Feb. 8, 1999 -- Elective foot and ankle surgery for diabetic patients can lead to increased risk of bone and joint degeneration, according to a study presented yesterday at the American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society annual winter meeting in Anaheim.

Because of nerve damage, diabetic patients become insensitive to foot pain and thus are susceptible to recurrent ulcerations, foot and ankle instability and deformities that make it impossible to wear shoes or braces. Surgery to correct these problems can lead to Charcot neuropathic arthropathy, a destructive form of bone and joint degeneration seen in insensate patients.

"Surgery may be successful in treating the original problem, but the patient becomes susceptible to developing Charcot disease," said Robert Anderson, M.D., Miller Orthopaedic Clinic, Charlotte, NC, senior author of the study.

"We're finding that surgery is no different that any other insult to the diabetic foot," Dr. Anderson said. "It can be done with caution and with a clear explanation to the patient that Charcot disease may develop."

At one time, the treatment of choice for diabetic patients with severe foot complications was amputation. Approximately one half of all foot amputations in the U.S. are for complications due to diabetes.

"Orthopaedic surgeons now are performing more procedures to prevent foot amputation," Dr. Anderson explained. "As a result, we are seeing more complications such as Charcot foot deformity."

Dr. Anderson added physicians need to have a greater degree of awareness of the complications of Charcot deformity in diabetic patients who have elective surgery. Physicians also need to take measures to prevent or reduce the risk of Charcot such as immobilising patients in a nonweightbearing cast after surgery for an extended period of time.

The study looked at 25 patients who developed Charcot foot following elective surgery performed by orthopaedic surgeons at the Miller Orthpaedic Clinic in Charlotte. Most of the patients (21 of 25) had documented pre-existing nerve damage (peripheral neuropathy). None had evidence of Charcot deformity prior to the surgery. The average time to Charcot diagnosis was 11 weeks (range four to 30 weeks).

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