What Is It?
A foot ulcer is an open sore on the foot. A foot ulcer can be a shallow red crater that involves only the surface skin. A foot ulcer also can be very deep. A deep foot ulcer may be a crater that extends through the full thickness of the skin, and may involve tendons, bones and other deep structures.
People with diabetes and people with poor circulation are more likely to develop foot ulcers. It can be difficult to heal a foot ulcer. In people with these conditions, even a small foot ulcer can become infected if it does not heal quickly.
If an infection occurs in an ulcer and is not treated right away, it can develop into an abscess (a pocket of pus), a spreading infection of the skin and underlying fat (cellulitis), a bone infection (osteomyelitis) or gangrene. Gangrene is an area of dead, darkened body tissue caused by poor blood flow. Among people with diabetes, a foot ulcer is the beginning stage of approximately 85% of severe foot infections that ultimately require some part of the toe, foot or lower leg to be amputated.
Foot ulcers are especially common in people who have one or more of the following health problems:
More than any other group, people with diabetes have a particularly high risk of developing foot ulcers. This is because the long-term complications of diabetes often include neuropathy and circulatory problems. Among the estimated 16 million diabetics living in the United States, approximately 15% eventually will develop an ulcer involving either the foot or ankle. Without prompt and proper treatment, this ulcer may require hospital treatment or may lead to deep infection or gangrene and amputation.
In addition to diabetes, other medical conditions that increase the risk of foot ulcers include:
It is rare for a foot ulcer to be unrelated to these risk factors and illnesses. A foot ulcer in a person who has none of these health problems may need to be checked for skin cancer, especially squamous cell carcinoma, which occasionally looks like a foot ulcer.
Symptoms
A foot ulcer looks like a red crater in the skin. Most foot ulcers are located on the side or bottom of the foot or on the top or tip of a toe. This round crater can be surrounded by a border of thickened, callused skin, or this border may develop over time. In very severe ulcers, the red crater may be deep enough to expose tendons or bones.
If the nerves in the foot are functioning normally, then the ulcer will be painful. If not, then a person with a foot ulcer may not know it is there, particularly if the ulcer is located on a less obvious portion of the foot. In disabled or elderly patients, a relative or caregiver may first notice the problem when the ulcer becomes infected, drains pus and develops a foul odor.
Diagnosis
In most cases, your doctor can tell that you have a foot ulcer simply by looking at your foot. If you have diabetes, your doctor will assess your control of your blood sugar and will ask about the care that you take to keep your feet healthy and the type of shoes that you usually wear. Your doctor will evaluate the ulcer to determine:
Your doctor may ask you to walk as part of your examination because your gait may highlight knee and ankle abnormalities that can cause ulcers. Your doctor will pay attention to structural problems, such as claw foot or fallen arches. To check for neuropathy, your doctor may test the sensation in your feet, check your reflexes and use a tuning fork to see if you can feel the vibration in your toes. Your doctor also can test the circulation in your legs and feet by feeling your pulses and noting whether your feet are pink and warm. If your pulses are weakened, then your doctor may use Doppler flow studies, a type of ultrasound test, to test your circulation.
When your doctor examines the ulcer itself, a cotton swab or other thin probe can be used to see how deep it is and checking for exposed tendons or bones. Your doctor will look closely for redness around the ulcer, since a large margin of redness can be a sign of cellulitis. Your doctor may order other tests to get a better picture of the extent of the ulcer and to determine whether it is infected. These tests may include blood tests, bacterial cultures of the ulcer, and possibly X-rays or other imaging tests, such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), computed tomography (CT) scan or a bone scan.
Expected Duration
How long a foot ulcer lasts depends on the depth of the ulcer, whether there is enough blood circulation to supply oxygen and nutrients, whether the ulcer can be protected from rubbing or pressure, and whether the ulcer is infected. In people who have good circulation and good medical care, an ulcer sometimes can heal in as few as three to six weeks. Deeper ulcers may take 12 to 20 weeks, and they sometimes require surgery.
Prevention
People who are at risk of foot ulcers, such as those with diabetes, can prevent about 50% of foot ulcers by examining their feet routinely and following good foot-hygiene practices. The following strategies may help prevent foot ulcers:
Treatment
If you have good circulation in your foot, your doctor may treat your foot ulcer by trimming away diseased tissue in a procedure called debridement. He or she also will remove any nearby callused skin. The doctor then will apply a dressing and may prescribe specialized footwear to relieve pressure on the ulcerated area. This specialized footwear may be a cast or a loosely fitting postoperative walking shoe or sandal that can be worn over a bandage.
Your doctor will need to see you frequently to examine and debride the area, and a nurse may need to visit you to change the dressing every several days. Care of a foot ulcer can require multiple visits over weeks or months � as long as it takes for your ulcer to heal completely. If there is a possibility of infection, you may be given antibiotics. Researchers are investigating newer approaches to speed the healing of foot ulcers, including gels that contain growth factors, artificial skin, hyperbaric oxygen and a form of a medicine called phenytoin (Dilantin) that can be placed directly on the ulcer. Phenytoin is used in pill form to treat seizures.
Once the ulcer has healed, your doctor may prescribe roomy, well-cushioned footwear that does not put pressure on vulnerable areas of your feet. This footwear will help to prevent ulcers in the future.
Foot ulcers that do not respond to more conservative therapy may require surgery. People with poor circulation may need vascular surgery (usually re-routing of blood flow through the leg using a bypass artery) to correct blood-flow problems in their leg arteries. In certain situations, without leg surgery, the ulcer may not heal properly.
When To Call a Professional
If you have diabetes, poor circulation or peripheral neuropathy, examine your feet every day. If you see an area of redness, swelling, bleeding, blisters or any other problem on the foot surface, call your doctor promptly.
Prognosis
In people with foot ulcers that are not deep, the outlook for healing is good if circulation to the foot is adequate. With the best wound-care methods available, most ulcers should heal within 12 weeks. However, about 30% of healed ulcers return, particularly in people who do not wear specialized footwear if it is prescribed by their doctors.
Additional Info
National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases
Information Clearinghouse
National Insitutes of Health
1 AMS Circle
Bethesda, MD 20892-3675
Phone: 301-495-4484
Toll-Free: 1-877-226-4267
Fax: 301-718-6366
TTY: 301-565-2966
E-Mail: niamsinfo@mail.nih.gov
http://www.niams.nih.gov/
American College of Foot & Ankle Orthopedics & Medicine
5272 River Road, Suite 630
Bethesda, MD 20816
Toll-Free 1-800-265-8263
Fax: 301-656-0989>br />E-Mail: info@acfaom.org
http://www.acfaom.org/
American Podiatric Medical Association (APMA)
9312 Old Georgetown Road
Bethesda, MD 20814
Phone: 301-571-9200
Toll-Free: 1-800-275-2762
Fax: 301-530-2752
E-Mail: askapma@apma.org
http://www.apma.org/
American Academy of Podiatric Sports Medicine
Toll-Free (888) 854-3388
E-Mail: info@aapsm.org
http://www.aapsm.org/
American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons
8725 West Higgins Road
Suite 555
Chicago, IL 60031-2724
Phone: 773-693-9300
Toll-Free: 1-800-421-2237
E-Mail: info@acfas.org
http://www.acfas.org/
American Diabetes Association
ATTN: National Call Center
1701 N. Beauregard St.
Alexandria, VA 22311
Toll-Free: 1-800-342-2383
E-Mail: askada@diabetes.org
http://www.diabetes.org/