Diabetic foot is one of the serious complications of diabetic patients. It is caused by diabetes combined with different degrees of lower extremity vascular lesions and neuropathy, and the wound can not heal for a long time. The serious results can cause bone marrow infection, bone destruction, and have high disability and death rate. At present, there are various treatment methods for diabetic foot chronic wound. On the basis of internal medicine controlling blood sugar, anti infection, lowering blood lipid, improving microcirculation and nourishment nerve, the surgical method is adopted, including the debridement of the necrosis in a short time to prevent the infection from spreading; maggot biological debridement and ozone chemical debridement will promote the growth of granulation tissue while controlling infection. Skin grafting, skin flap transplantation, skin distraction closure can be used to repair soft tissue defects, or fat transplantation, platelet-rich plasma, and rich blood are used for the refractory wound after infection control. In patients with diabetic foot, the reconstruction of lower limb blood supply is beneficial to the recovery of chronic ischemic wounds. It is feasible to improve the blood supply of the lower extremities, improve the blood supply of the lower extremity artery bypass grafting, and improve the microcirculation of the peripheral vessels around the lower extremities. Lower extremity vascular bypass pressure perfusion therapy for vascular network expansion, tibia lateral moving technique for lower limb microcirculation reconstruction. For diabetic foot ulcer caused by peripheral neuropathy, such as Charcot foot, while the application of external fixator, total contact cast technology of affected foot for reducing treatment to promote wound healing; the preparation of orthopedic shoes can play a maximum protective effect on the healing of diabetic foot wound healing.
The 8th World International Symposium on the Diabetic Foot (ISDF) Conference which was sponsored by the International Working Group on Diabetic Foot (IWGDF) was held in the Hague between May 22nd and May 25th, 2019. The conference issued the 2019 IWGDF guidelines on the prevention and management of diabetic foot disease. The update to the 2015 edition of the guidelines involves the following 6 chapters: prevention of foot ulcers in patients with diabetes; offloading foot ulcers in patients with diabetes; diagnosis, prognosis, and management of peripheral arterial disease in patients with a foot ulcer and diabetes; diagnosis and treatment of foot infection in patients with diabetes; interventions to enhance healing of foot ulcers in patients with diabetes; classification of diabetic foot ulcers. This guideline has been changed more than the previous edition. In this paper, the guidelines will be interpreted to provide cutting-edge information for domestic diabetic foot researchers.