View clinical trials related to Diabetic Foot.
Filter by:This is a phase 2 double-blind clinical study to evaluate the efficacy and Safety of ALLO-ASC-SHEET in subjects with Diabetic Foot Ulcers, compared to placebo therapy.
Despite the prominence of diabetes prevalence (more than 8% of the world population in 2012) and its expected increase in the next 15 years, Charcot foot remains a widely unknown diabetes complication. At this day, there is no national guidelines about diagnosis and treatment of this complication, which is known to alter life quality and to increase risk of foot ulceration and mortality in diabetics. Through this descriptive multicentric study, we will investigate the Charcot foot cares in diabetic-foot centers in France and Belgium.
The investigators plan to evaluate healing in a cohort of patients with chronic wounds (n=40) that receive optimal treatment including serial wound debridement and off-loading with total contact casts or a boot and GrafixPL PRIME. In addition, the investigators will collect data on other potential confounding factors that could affect healing such as medications, tobacco, nutrition, comorbidities, diabetes control, infection, perfusion, and activity. Wound healing, including wound size and adverse events will be evaluated. The objective of this study is to understand the use of this product to evaluate wound healing in 40 patients.
Diabetic foot ulcer is one of the most serious, most costly and at times life threatening complication of diabetes. The lifetime incidence of foot ulcer occurrence in diabetes is up to 25%. Despite the advent of numerous types of wound dressings and off-loading mechanisms, the ulcer healing rates in diabetes have remained dismally low. Hyperglycemia impairs the inflammatory, proliferative and remodeling phases of an ulcer. There are retrospective studies linking improvement of HbA1c to wound area healing rate. The investigators hypothesised that intensive glycemic control in a patient of diabetic foot ulcer improves the healing process. To explore this hypothesis, the investigators are conducting this randomized control trial with the primary aim of wound healing in patients of diabetic foot ulcer on either intensive glycemic treatment or conventional (pre-existing) glycemic treatment.
This study evaluates the effects of a physiotherapy protocol (manual therapy and exercise) in the prevention of diabetic foot ulcers in patients with diabetic neuropathy. A group of participants will receive a physiotherapy protocol added to their usual medical treatment and the other group will not receive physiotherapy treatment.
Study will evaluate the use of lower-limb assistive exo-skeletons worn on the ankle and foot. Participants will wear the exo-skeletons and walk in a safe environment. Measurements will be taken to determine how the exo-skeletons affect the pressure on the feet of people with diabetic foot ulcer and how they walk.
The aim of this study is to compare between the platelet rich plasma and normal saline dressing in the healing diabetic foot ulcers. It will be a randomized controlled trial.
Diabetic foot osteomyelitis is a common and serious complication of diabetes. While the diagnosis of soft tissue infection can be made with simple physical examination in most cases, bone involvement can be harder to diagnose, often requiring medical imaging. In addition to conventional radiological examinations (x-ray and MRI) nuclear medicine procedures can also provide important physiological information in these patients. These procedures include triple phase bone scan combined with Gallium scintigraphy or a combination of labelled leukocyte scintigraphy and bone marrow scintigraphy using sulfur colloid. These procedure, while they provide useful physiological information, are time consuming, generally requiring at least 2 separate image acquisition on separate days, and can be costly. 18F-FDG is a glucose analog that can be used for PET imaging. In addition to its application in oncology, the literature has shown that FDG can be used to investigate a wide variety of inflammatory and infectious conditions, including diabetic foot infections. The aim of this study is to compare the usefulness of FDG PET imaging versus "conventional" nuclear medicine (either bone scan and Gallium scintigraphy or labelled leukocytes and sulfur colloid scintigraphy) in patient with suspected diabetic foot osteomyelitis.
To determine the efficacy of full-thickness placental allograft in chronic wound healing
The aim of the study was to investigate the role of the proteolytic fraction from Vasconcellea cundinamarcensis, designated as P1G10, on healing of chronic foot ulcers in neuropathic patients diagnosed with diabetes type 2. Fifty patients were enrolled in a prospective, randomized, double-blind trial, to verify the efficacy and safety of a topical dressing containing 0.1% P1G10, versus a Hydrogel (positive control) protocol currently applied at the Health Center to treat this condition. Upon completion of the intervention, the outcome evaluated the number of patients attaining full epithelization (100%), or at least 80% healing in both arms (P1G10 versus Hydrogel). Statistical analysis compared the endpoint data on each group to assess the significance of differences.