Early action and nutritional therapies bring hope for diabetes patients with foot problems

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(BPT) - The eyes may be the window to the soul, but when it comes to health, the feet are often the first place where signs of a problem appear – especially in people living with type 2 diabetes. A person with diabetes is most likely to experience symptoms in their feet earlier than any other part of the body, yet those symptoms often go unnoticed or misinterpreted.

Foot problems in people with diabetes may herald diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN) – a serious complication of diabetes. The good news is that with a proactive approach to foot health, and the right therapies, it is possible for diabetes patients to stem the progress of their DPN.

While pain is the most common symptom of DPN – and the one that gets the most attention – a lack of pain, or more specifically, lack of any sensation, can be even more damaging.

“The sensory loss often associated with DPN can lead to a loss of protective sensation, and can cause infections which can lead to amputations,” says Dr. Todd Levine, director of Corinthian Labs in Phoenix, and an international authority on DPN and type 2 diabetes. “We believe there are ways to slow down or reverse the progress of DPN, so the earlier you recognize the problem the easier it is to reverse the condition.”

DPN is one of two factors that make people with diabetes more likely to have a foot or leg amputated than other people, according to the American Diabetes Association (ADA). The risk is so much greater that the American Podiatric Medical Association says more than 60 percent of non-traumatic lower-limb amputations in the United States are performed on people with diabetes. However, the ADA says, most amputations could be prevented with regular care and proper footwear.

Levine concurs. “Typically, the prognosis for DPN patients has been that they have gotten worse or, at best, stayed the same,” he says. “There has always been the concern for amputation and infection. But there are ways to slow down or reverse this disease.”

“Many studies are being conducted right now to find ways to reverse DPN,” Levine says. “Some of this is with specific nerve growth factors. Some is by diet and exercise, and some through nutritional supplementation.”

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