Bubbling Treatment Option in the Complex Therapy of Diabetic Foot Syndrome

Autor: Alexander Alexandrovich Shmarin, Vladislav Valeryevich Novomlinsky, Anton Petrovich Ostroushko, Anastasia Yurievna Laptiyova, A A Glukhov, Alexander Alekseevich Andreev
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
Zdroj: Journal of Experimental and Clinical Surgery. 14:210-215
ISSN: 2409-143X
2070-478X
DOI: 10.18499/2070-478x-2021-14-3-210-215
Popis: Diabetes mellitus (DM) is the most common and socially significant endocrine disease that leads to early disability and is the most common cause of mortality in patients after cancer and cardiovascular pathology. The cost of managing patients with diabetes can reach 30% of the country's health budget, 90% of which is spent on the treatment of its complications. Diabetic foot syndrome (DFS) is developed in 20-80% of patients and is one of the most dangerous late complications. In clinical practice, various approaches to its treatment are used, but the number of high amputation and mortality rate in this group of patients remains significant. The aim of the study was to improve the results of treatment of patients with diabetic foot syndrome (DFS) by including the bubbling treatment method in the program of therapeutic measures. Forty-eight patients with neuropathic and neuroischemic forms of DFS were treated. The control group consisted of 23 patients receiving conventional treatment, the main group included 26 patients, who were applied bubbling treatment option locally. The analysis of groups of patients showed no significant differences by gender, age, stages of diabetic foot syndrome, depth of necrotic defect, complications and concomitant diseases. The use of the bubbling treatment method in the complex treatment of patients with DFS allowed more effectively arresting symptoms of local (edema, hyperemia, wound exudate, necrolysis) and general inflammation, anemia and intoxication syndromes, contributed to the activation of regeneration processes in soft tissues, which, combined with complex FDS treatment, together, reduced the number of amputations by 18.7%.
Databáze: OpenAIRE