Foot Examination & Monitoring
It is recommended by NICE (2016) that regular (at least annual) visual inspection of a patient’s feet, assessment of foot sensation, and palpation of foot pulses by trained personnel is important for the detection of risk factors for ulceration.
Examination of a patient’s feet should include:
- Testing of foot sensation using a 10g monofilament or vibration (using biothesiometer or calibrated tuning fork)
- Palpation of foot pulses
- Inspection for any foot deformity
- Inspection of footwear
- 3-minute diabetic foot exam
(WUWHS, 2016)
3-minute diabetic foot exam
Minute 1: What to Ask
Minute 2: What to look for
Minute 3: What to Teach
Diabetic foot ulcer risk can be classified as:
- Low current risk (normal sensation, palpable pulses)
- At increased risk (neuropathy or absent pulses or other risk factor)
- At high risk (neuropathy or absent pulses plus deformity or skin changes or previous ulcer)
- Ulcerated foot
(NICE, 2016, 2022)
ULCERATED FOOT/ FOOT CARE EMERGENCIES
If a person has a limb-threatening or life-threatening diabetic foot problem, refer them immediately to acute services and inform the multidisciplinary foot care service (according to local protocols and pathways), so they can be assessed and an individualised treatment plan put in place.
Examples of limb-threatening and life-threatening diabetic foot problems include the following:
- Ulceration with fever or any signs of sepsis
- Ulceration with limb ischaemia
- Clinical concern that there is a deep-seated soft tissue or bone infection (with or without ulceration)
- Gangrene (with or without ulceration)
(NICE, 2016, 2022)
The multi-disciplinary foot care team should comprise highly trained specialist podiatrists and orthotists, nurses with training in dressing of diabetic foot wounds and diabetologists with expertise in lower limb complications. They should have unhindered access to suites for managing major wounds, urgent inpatient facilities, antibiotic administration, community nursing, microbiology diagnostic and advisory services, orthopaedic/podiatric surgery, vascular surgery, radiology and orthotics (NICE, 2016, 2022).
All clinicians involved in managing patients with diabetes have a responsibility to provide education and training surrounding foot health. Patients and carers should also be instructed on the importance of maintaining their foot health. This module has outlined the importance of using a system to classify the diabetic foot to ensure that complications are prevented, and where it is not possible to prevent complications, they are managed in the most appropriate manner.
Many diabetic patients are seen frequently by nurses, and they can, therefore, play a key role in the multidisciplinary team that will be managing their diabetic foot problems. It is essential that all nurses who have frequent contact with diabetic patients understand how to assess, classify and manage the diabetic foot so that appropriate care, education and referrals take place in a timely manner.