Observational Study
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2019.
World J Diabetes. Mar 15, 2019; 10(3): 200-211
Published online Mar 15, 2019. doi: 10.4239/wjd.v10.i3.200
Table 1 Clinical profile of the patients with diabetic foot ulcers
Variablen (%)mean ± SD
Age (yr)55.9 ± 12.5
< 45 yr48 (14.3)
45-64 yr200 (59.5)
≥ 65 yr88 (26.2)
Gender (male)185 (55.1)
Occupation
Civil servants61(18.2)
Traders137 (40.8)
Artisans12 (3.6)
Farmers40 (11.9)
Unemployed86 (25.6)
Cigarette smoking (current smokers)17 (5.1)
Diabetes type (type 2)323 (96.1)
Diabetes duration (yr)8.5 ± 5.7
≤ 10 yr250 (74.4)
11-20 yr79 (23.5)
> 20 yr7 (2.1)
Newly diagnosed diabetes49 (14.6)
Glycated hemoglobin (%) (n = 296)9.6 ± 1.9
HbA1c < 7%17 (5.7)
Referred from outside the study centers241 (71.7)
Ever had foot care education87 (25.9)
Type of Ulcer
Neuropathic125 (37.2)
Ischemic42 (12.5)
Neuro-ischemic135 (40.2)
Non-neuropathic, non-ischemic34 (10.1)
Duration of ulcer before admission (d)39 (28-54)1
Ulcer > 30 d duration237 (70.5)
Previous history of ulcer96 (28.6)
Advanced ulcer (Wagner grade ≥ 3)266 (79.2)
Presence of wound infection258 (76.8)
Co-morbid complications
Hypertension191 (56.8)
Shock40 (11.9)
Anemia180 (53.6)
Hyperglycemic emergency123 (36.6)
Hypoglycemia33 (9.8)
Cardiac failure23 (6.8)
Renal impairment66 (19.6)
Stroke32 (9.5)