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Establishing Differences in Thermographic Patterns between the Various Complications in Diabetic Foot Disease

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Establishing Differences in Thermographic Patterns between the Various Complications in Diabetic Foot Disease. / Gatt, Alfred; Sturgeon, Cassandra.
In: International Journal of Endocrinology, Vol. 2018, 9808295, 12.03.2018.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Gatt, A., & Sturgeon, C. (2018). Establishing Differences in Thermographic Patterns between the Various Complications in Diabetic Foot Disease. International Journal of Endocrinology, 2018, Article 9808295. https://doi.org/10.1155/2018/9808295

Vancouver

Gatt A, Sturgeon C. Establishing Differences in Thermographic Patterns between the Various Complications in Diabetic Foot Disease. International Journal of Endocrinology. 2018 Mar 12;2018:9808295. doi: 10.1155/2018/9808295

Author

Gatt, Alfred ; Sturgeon, Cassandra. / Establishing Differences in Thermographic Patterns between the Various Complications in Diabetic Foot Disease. In: International Journal of Endocrinology. 2018 ; Vol. 2018.

Bibtex

@article{bec0c9c0b1f145aa817f5ca21f1af632,
title = "Establishing Differences in Thermographic Patterns between the Various Complications in Diabetic Foot Disease",
abstract = "To evaluate the potential of thermography as an assessment tool for the detection of foot complications by understanding the variations in temperature that occur in type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM). Methods: Participants were categorized according to a medical examination, ankle brachial index, doppler waveform analysis, and 10-gram monofilament testing into five groups: healthy adult, DM with no complications, DM with peripheral neuropathy, DM with neuroischaemia, and DM with peripheral arterial disease (PAD) groups. Thermographic imaging of the toes and forefeet was performed. Results: 43 neuroischaemic feet, 41 neuropathic feet, 58 PAD feet, 21 DM feet without complications, and 126 healthy feet were analyzed. The temperatures of the feet and toes were significantly higher in the complications group when compared to the healthy adult and DM healthy groups. The higher the temperatures of the foot in DM, the higher the probability that it is affected by neuropathy, neuroischaemia, or PAD. Conclusions Significant differences in mean temperatures exist between participants who were healthy and those with DM with no known complications when compared to participants with neuroischaemia, neuropathy, or PAD. As foot temperature rises, so does the probability of the presence of complications of neuropathy, neuroischaemia, or peripheral arterial disease.",
author = "Alfred Gatt and Cassandra Sturgeon",
year = "2018",
month = mar,
day = "12",
doi = "10.1155/2018/9808295",
language = "English",
volume = "2018",
journal = "International Journal of Endocrinology",
issn = "1687-8337",
publisher = "Hindawi Publishing Corporation",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Establishing Differences in Thermographic Patterns between the Various Complications in Diabetic Foot Disease

AU - Gatt, Alfred

AU - Sturgeon, Cassandra

PY - 2018/3/12

Y1 - 2018/3/12

N2 - To evaluate the potential of thermography as an assessment tool for the detection of foot complications by understanding the variations in temperature that occur in type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM). Methods: Participants were categorized according to a medical examination, ankle brachial index, doppler waveform analysis, and 10-gram monofilament testing into five groups: healthy adult, DM with no complications, DM with peripheral neuropathy, DM with neuroischaemia, and DM with peripheral arterial disease (PAD) groups. Thermographic imaging of the toes and forefeet was performed. Results: 43 neuroischaemic feet, 41 neuropathic feet, 58 PAD feet, 21 DM feet without complications, and 126 healthy feet were analyzed. The temperatures of the feet and toes were significantly higher in the complications group when compared to the healthy adult and DM healthy groups. The higher the temperatures of the foot in DM, the higher the probability that it is affected by neuropathy, neuroischaemia, or PAD. Conclusions Significant differences in mean temperatures exist between participants who were healthy and those with DM with no known complications when compared to participants with neuroischaemia, neuropathy, or PAD. As foot temperature rises, so does the probability of the presence of complications of neuropathy, neuroischaemia, or peripheral arterial disease.

AB - To evaluate the potential of thermography as an assessment tool for the detection of foot complications by understanding the variations in temperature that occur in type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM). Methods: Participants were categorized according to a medical examination, ankle brachial index, doppler waveform analysis, and 10-gram monofilament testing into five groups: healthy adult, DM with no complications, DM with peripheral neuropathy, DM with neuroischaemia, and DM with peripheral arterial disease (PAD) groups. Thermographic imaging of the toes and forefeet was performed. Results: 43 neuroischaemic feet, 41 neuropathic feet, 58 PAD feet, 21 DM feet without complications, and 126 healthy feet were analyzed. The temperatures of the feet and toes were significantly higher in the complications group when compared to the healthy adult and DM healthy groups. The higher the temperatures of the foot in DM, the higher the probability that it is affected by neuropathy, neuroischaemia, or PAD. Conclusions Significant differences in mean temperatures exist between participants who were healthy and those with DM with no known complications when compared to participants with neuroischaemia, neuropathy, or PAD. As foot temperature rises, so does the probability of the presence of complications of neuropathy, neuroischaemia, or peripheral arterial disease.

U2 - 10.1155/2018/9808295

DO - 10.1155/2018/9808295

M3 - Journal article

VL - 2018

JO - International Journal of Endocrinology

JF - International Journal of Endocrinology

SN - 1687-8337

M1 - 9808295

ER -