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The Application of Medical Thermography to Discriminate Neuroischemic Toe Ulceration in the Diabetic Foot

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The Application of Medical Thermography to Discriminate Neuroischemic Toe Ulceration in the Diabetic Foot. / Gatt, Alfred; Sturgeon, Cassandra.
In: The International Journal of Lower Extremity Wounds, Vol. 17, No. 2, 30.06.2018, p. 102-105.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Gatt, A & Sturgeon, C 2018, 'The Application of Medical Thermography to Discriminate Neuroischemic Toe Ulceration in the Diabetic Foot', The International Journal of Lower Extremity Wounds, vol. 17, no. 2, pp. 102-105. https://doi.org/10.1177/1534734618783910

APA

Gatt, A., & Sturgeon, C. (2018). The Application of Medical Thermography to Discriminate Neuroischemic Toe Ulceration in the Diabetic Foot. The International Journal of Lower Extremity Wounds, 17(2), 102-105. https://doi.org/10.1177/1534734618783910

Vancouver

Gatt A, Sturgeon C. The Application of Medical Thermography to Discriminate Neuroischemic Toe Ulceration in the Diabetic Foot. The International Journal of Lower Extremity Wounds. 2018 Jun 30;17(2):102-105. Epub 2018 Jun 27. doi: 10.1177/1534734618783910

Author

Gatt, Alfred ; Sturgeon, Cassandra. / The Application of Medical Thermography to Discriminate Neuroischemic Toe Ulceration in the Diabetic Foot. In: The International Journal of Lower Extremity Wounds. 2018 ; Vol. 17, No. 2. pp. 102-105.

Bibtex

@article{b433d44abc7f477f89444d26624207e1,
title = "The Application of Medical Thermography to Discriminate Neuroischemic Toe Ulceration in the Diabetic Foot",
abstract = "This study aimed to determine whether thermal imaging can detect temperature differences between healthy feet, nonulcerated neuroischemic feet, and neuroischemic feet with toe ulcers in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Participants were prospectively divided into 3 groups: T2DM without foot problems; a healthy, nonulcerated neuroischemic group, and an ulcerated neuroischemic group. Thermal images of the feet were obtained with automated segmentation of regions of interest. Thermographic images from 43 neuroischemic feet, 21 healthy feet, and 12 neuroischemic feet with active ulcer in one of the toes were analyzed. There was a significant difference in toe temperatures between the 3 groups ( P = .001), that is, nonulcerated neuroischemic (n = 181; mean temperature = 27.7°C [±2.16 SD]) versus neuroischemic ulcerated (n = 12; mean temperature = 28.7°C [±3.23 SD]), and healthy T2DM group (n = 104; mean temperature = 24.9°C [±5.04 SD]). A post hoc analysis showed a significant difference in toe temperatures between neuroischemic nonulcerated and healthy T2DM groups ( P = .001), neuroischemic ulcerated and healthy groups ( P = .001). However, no significant differences in toe temperatures were identified between the ulcerated neuroischemic and nonulcerated neuroischemic groups ( P = .626). There were no significant differences between the ulcerated toes (n = 12) and the nonulcerated toes (n = 57) of the same foot in the ulcerated neuroischemic group ( P = .331). Toe temperatures were significantly higher in neuroischemic feet with or without ulceration compared with healthy feet in patients with T2DM. There were no significant differences in temperatures of ulcerated toes and the nonulcerated toes of the same foot, implying that all the toes of the same foot could potentially be at risk of developing complications, which can be potentially detected by infrared thermography.",
author = "Alfred Gatt and Cassandra Sturgeon",
year = "2018",
month = jun,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1177/1534734618783910",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "102--105",
journal = "The International Journal of Lower Extremity Wounds",
issn = "1534-7346",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Inc.",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The Application of Medical Thermography to Discriminate Neuroischemic Toe Ulceration in the Diabetic Foot

AU - Gatt, Alfred

AU - Sturgeon, Cassandra

PY - 2018/6/30

Y1 - 2018/6/30

N2 - This study aimed to determine whether thermal imaging can detect temperature differences between healthy feet, nonulcerated neuroischemic feet, and neuroischemic feet with toe ulcers in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Participants were prospectively divided into 3 groups: T2DM without foot problems; a healthy, nonulcerated neuroischemic group, and an ulcerated neuroischemic group. Thermal images of the feet were obtained with automated segmentation of regions of interest. Thermographic images from 43 neuroischemic feet, 21 healthy feet, and 12 neuroischemic feet with active ulcer in one of the toes were analyzed. There was a significant difference in toe temperatures between the 3 groups ( P = .001), that is, nonulcerated neuroischemic (n = 181; mean temperature = 27.7°C [±2.16 SD]) versus neuroischemic ulcerated (n = 12; mean temperature = 28.7°C [±3.23 SD]), and healthy T2DM group (n = 104; mean temperature = 24.9°C [±5.04 SD]). A post hoc analysis showed a significant difference in toe temperatures between neuroischemic nonulcerated and healthy T2DM groups ( P = .001), neuroischemic ulcerated and healthy groups ( P = .001). However, no significant differences in toe temperatures were identified between the ulcerated neuroischemic and nonulcerated neuroischemic groups ( P = .626). There were no significant differences between the ulcerated toes (n = 12) and the nonulcerated toes (n = 57) of the same foot in the ulcerated neuroischemic group ( P = .331). Toe temperatures were significantly higher in neuroischemic feet with or without ulceration compared with healthy feet in patients with T2DM. There were no significant differences in temperatures of ulcerated toes and the nonulcerated toes of the same foot, implying that all the toes of the same foot could potentially be at risk of developing complications, which can be potentially detected by infrared thermography.

AB - This study aimed to determine whether thermal imaging can detect temperature differences between healthy feet, nonulcerated neuroischemic feet, and neuroischemic feet with toe ulcers in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Participants were prospectively divided into 3 groups: T2DM without foot problems; a healthy, nonulcerated neuroischemic group, and an ulcerated neuroischemic group. Thermal images of the feet were obtained with automated segmentation of regions of interest. Thermographic images from 43 neuroischemic feet, 21 healthy feet, and 12 neuroischemic feet with active ulcer in one of the toes were analyzed. There was a significant difference in toe temperatures between the 3 groups ( P = .001), that is, nonulcerated neuroischemic (n = 181; mean temperature = 27.7°C [±2.16 SD]) versus neuroischemic ulcerated (n = 12; mean temperature = 28.7°C [±3.23 SD]), and healthy T2DM group (n = 104; mean temperature = 24.9°C [±5.04 SD]). A post hoc analysis showed a significant difference in toe temperatures between neuroischemic nonulcerated and healthy T2DM groups ( P = .001), neuroischemic ulcerated and healthy groups ( P = .001). However, no significant differences in toe temperatures were identified between the ulcerated neuroischemic and nonulcerated neuroischemic groups ( P = .626). There were no significant differences between the ulcerated toes (n = 12) and the nonulcerated toes (n = 57) of the same foot in the ulcerated neuroischemic group ( P = .331). Toe temperatures were significantly higher in neuroischemic feet with or without ulceration compared with healthy feet in patients with T2DM. There were no significant differences in temperatures of ulcerated toes and the nonulcerated toes of the same foot, implying that all the toes of the same foot could potentially be at risk of developing complications, which can be potentially detected by infrared thermography.

U2 - 10.1177/1534734618783910

DO - 10.1177/1534734618783910

M3 - Journal article

VL - 17

SP - 102

EP - 105

JO - The International Journal of Lower Extremity Wounds

JF - The International Journal of Lower Extremity Wounds

SN - 1534-7346

IS - 2

ER -