Between visit variability of thermal imaging of feet in people attending podiatric clinics with diabetic neuropathy at high risk of developing foot ulcers
Autor: | Ben Kluwe, Audrey Macdonald, A. Whittam, John F. Allen, J Bevans, Rob Simpson, Leon Rogers, Graham Machin, Nina L. Petrova, Peter Plassmann, Wegin Tang, Michael Edmonds, Francis Ring, Suhail Ainarker, Clare Lomas |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Male
medicine.medical_specialty Diabetic neuropathy Physiology 0206 medical engineering Biomedical Engineering Biophysics 02 engineering and technology Skin breakdown 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Diabetic Neuropathies Ambulatory care Interquartile range Physiology (medical) Internal medicine Ambulatory Care Humans Medicine Foot ulcers Podiatry Aged Foot business.industry Middle Aged medicine.disease 020601 biomedical engineering Diabetic Foot Single patient Thermography Female business 030217 neurology & neurosurgery Foot (unit) |
Zdroj: | Physiological Measurement. 40:084004 |
ISSN: | 1361-6579 |
DOI: | 10.1088/1361-6579/ab36d7 |
Popis: | People with diabetic neuropathy who have previously ulcerated are at high risk of reulceration. They should regularly attend podiatry clinics for surveillance and routine protective podiatric treatment. It has been suggested that inflammation prior to skin breakdown shows up as a hotspot on a thermal image even in the absence of clinical signs. The aim of this study is to quantify inter-patient and intra-patient thermal variations presented by diabetic feet at high risk of ulceration. Approach: Whole foot and spot temperatures were recorded for 96 patients who attended two successive podiatry appointments without ulceration 28 [28, 31] days apart, median [interquartile range]. This was a part of a longer study into whether thermal imaging in clinic can reduce the rate of re-ulceration. Main results: The variation in spot temperature right/left differences for single patients between visits was comparable to the variation observed between patients (0.8 [0.3, 1.5] °C compared with 0.9 [0.4, 1.7] °C). Similarly, whole foot temperature variation for a single patient between visits was comparable to the variation observed between patients (0.6 [0.2, 1.1] °C compared with 0.8 [0.2, 1.3] °C). Significance: Thresholds which depend on thermal differences from visit to visit are unlikely to have sufficient specificity to effectively target treatment designed to prevent the development of foot ulcers. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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