Evaluation of the Surgical and Pharmacological Treatment of Diabetic Foot Infection: A Retrospective Study

Authors

  • Adil Hassan Aliakbar Department of Surgery, College of Medicine, University of Babylon, Babil, Iraq
  • Malath Azeez Alsaadi Department of Basic Medical Sciences, College of Dentistry, University of Babylon, Babil, Iraq
  • Abbas Abd Zaid Barrak Ministry of Health, Hilla Teaching Hospital, Iraq

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3889/oamjms.2019.298

Keywords:

Antibiotics, Diabetic foot, Infection, Outpatients

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Diabetic foot infection is a major cause of patient disabilities and lowers limb amputations, with high treatment costs and hospitalisation requirements.

AIM: Aim of this study was to evaluate surgical wound care plus antibiotic effects in the treatment of mild and moderate diabetic foot infections.

METHODS: This retrospective study involved 60 patients with diabetic foot infections with or without osteomyelitis. The patients were categorised as group 1 mild and group 2 moderate. Both groups were treated using local wound debridement and the systemic administration of antibiotics. Group 1 (16) patients were treated with two regimens of oral antibiotics in two regimens, A (amoxicillin/clavulanate + metronidazole) and B (clindamycin + metronidazole), for 10-14 days. Group 2 (42) patients were treated with oral plus intravenous antibiotics in two regimens, A (ampicillin + cloxacillin + metronidazole) and B (lincomycin + metronidazole), for 6 weeks. The patients followed-up with local wound care specialists for 3 months to evaluate the treatment outcomes (cure, improvement, or failure).

RESULTS: Group 1 had an 80% cure rate under regimen A and a 100% cure rate under regimen B. Group 2 regimen A patients had a 61.5% cure rate and 11.53% improved, while regimen B patients had a 68.75% cure rate and 12.5% improved. Failure in both regimens was 23.8% in 20 patients with osteomyelitis, while 35% were cured and 20% improved during the study period.

CONCLUSION: Local surgical wound care for 3 months with antibiotic regimens for 6 weeks resulted in good response and cure rates, with lower costs and fewer instances of hospitalisation. Intravenous lincomycin and oral metronidazole achieved higher cure responses for moderate diabetic foot infections.

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Published

2019-05-14

How to Cite

1.
Aliakbar AH, Alsaadi MA, Barrak AAZ. Evaluation of the Surgical and Pharmacological Treatment of Diabetic Foot Infection: A Retrospective Study. Open Access Maced J Med Sci [Internet]. 2019 May 14 [cited 2024 Apr. 26];7(9):1499-504. Available from: https://oamjms.eu/index.php/mjms/article/view/oamjms.2019.298

Issue

Section

B - Clinical Sciences

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