Serious hand sepsis and diabetes mellitus: specific tropical syndrome with western counterparts
- PMID: 9796887
- DOI: 10.1002/(SICI)1096-9136(199810)15:10<858::AID-DIA698>3.0.CO;2-Z
Serious hand sepsis and diabetes mellitus: specific tropical syndrome with western counterparts
Abstract
Infection in the extremities of diabetic patients most commonly involves the feet and, at least in western societies, is often associated with chronic complications of diabetes. Severe hand infection, often culminating in amputation and even death, is, however, well-described in tropical countries, where it may not be associated with any evidence of neuropathy or arterial insufficiency. Similar cases are described in the western literature but are more often associated with more severe antecedent trauma. The literature describing hand sepsis in diabetic patients both in tropical and in western practice is reviewed and we draw some conclusions about pathogenesis and treatment from the literature and from original data documenting the varying experience of hand sepsis in diabetic practice throughout Africa.
Comment in
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Coincidence of hand and foot ulceration in people with diabetes.Diabet Med. 2001 Jun;18(6):514-5. doi: 10.1046/j.0742-3071.2001.00454.x. Diabet Med. 2001. PMID: 11472473 No abstract available.