IWGDF guidance on the diagnosis and management of foot infections in persons with diabetes
University of Oxford · University Hospital of Geneva · +11 more institutions
Abstract
Recommendations Classification/diagnosis Diabetic foot infection must be diagnosed clinically, based on the presence of local or systemic signs or symptoms of inflammation (strong; low). Assess the severity of any diabetic foot infection using the Infectious Diseases Society of America/International Working Group on the Diabetic Foot classification scheme (strong; moderate). Osteomyelitis For an infected open wound, perform a probe‐to‐bone test; in a patient at low risk for osteomyelitis, a negative test largely rules out the diagnosis, while in a high‐risk patient, a positive test is largely diagnostic (strong; high). Markedly elevated serum inflammatory markers, especially erythrocyte sedimentation rate, are…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 30.70
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 272
Authors
10Topics & keywords
- Osteomyelitis
- Medicine
- Diabetic foot
- Erythrocyte sedimentation rate
- Bone Infection
- Diabetes mellitus
- Magnetic resonance imaging
- Foot (prosody)