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Foot and ankle problems of aboriginal and non-aboriginal diabetic patients with end-stage renal disease.

机译:患有终末期肾脏疾病的原住民和非原住民糖尿病患者的脚和脚踝问题。

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BACKGROUND: There is little information available about the profile of lower extremity morbidity in diabetic patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) in the Canadian Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal population. METHOD: A retrospective review of medical records in 127 diabetic patients on hemodialysis at a tertiary health care center was performed. Patient interviews and physical examinations were performed in 77 of these patients (36 Aboriginal, 41 non-Aboriginal), and followup evaluation was done in 39 patients at an average of 1 year later. RESULTS: Aboriginal patients were an average of 7 years younger than non-Aboriginal patients. Comorbidities of diabetes and ESRD were frequent. Peripheral neuropathy and inability to occlude the vessels were present in the majority of feet. Lower extremity complications were frequent, including prior foot ulcer in the majority of patients and an amputation in more than one fourth of the patients. Aboriginal patients had a significantly greater frequency of prior foot ulcer, mean number of foot ulcers per patient, amputation, prior osteomyelitis, and Charcot foot than non-Aboriginal patients. Almost all patients were at risk for future foot ulcer, but many patients did not inspect their feet daily. Home care was significantly less frequently available for Aboriginal than non-Aboriginal patients. The majority of patients had inadequate custom or prefabricated shoes and did not wear insoles on the day of examination. Aboriginal patients cited financial cost, insufficient family support, and language barriers as reasons for inadequate foot care and footwear more frequently than non-Aboriginal subjects. A significantly smaller frequency of Aboriginal patients had good knowledge of footwear or diet than non-Aboriginal patients. CONCLUSIONS: Lower extremity complications were significantly more frequent in Aboriginal than non-Aboriginal diabetic patients with ESRD. Financial cost and knowledge deficit were barriers to adequate foot care and footwear. These findings support the need for a formal foot care and footwear program for this high-risk population.
机译:背景:在加拿大原住民和非原住民人群中,患有终末期肾病(ESRD)的糖尿病患者的下肢发病情况的资料很少。方法:对三级卫生保健中心对127名糖尿病患者进行血液透析的病历进行回顾性回顾。对这些患者中的77例(36名土著,41名非土著)进行了患者访谈和体格检查,平均一年后对39名患者进行了随访评估。结果:原住民患者平均比非原住民患者年轻7岁。糖尿病和ESRD的合并症很常见。大部分脚部存在周围神经病变和无法闭塞血管。下肢并发症很常见,包括大多数患者的前足溃疡和超过四分之一的患者截肢。与非原住民患者相比,原住民患者的先前足溃疡,每位患者的平均足溃疡数量,截肢,先前骨髓炎和夏科特足病的发生率明显更高。几乎所有患者都有患上未来足溃疡的风险,但是许多患者没有每天检查脚。与非土著居民相比,土著居民的家庭护理频率明显较低。大多数患者的定制鞋或预制鞋不足,并且在检查当天没有穿鞋垫。原住民患者比非原住民患者更频繁地提到经济成本,家庭支持不足和语言障碍是足部护理和鞋类不足的原因。与非原住民患者相比,原住民患者对鞋类或饮食有很好的了解的频率要小得多。结论:原发性ESRD糖尿病患者下肢并发症的发生率明显高于非原发糖尿病患者。财务成本和知识匮乏是足部护理和鞋类穿着的障碍。这些发现支持针对此高风险人群的正式足部护理和鞋类计划的需求。

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