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

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Successful therapies usually include diet and exercise, controlling blood sugar, and treating DPN with products like Metanx, Levine says. Available only by prescription, the medical food provides the nutritional requirements diabetes patients need to restore the metabolic processes associated with diabetic neuropathy.

Levine offers some additional advice for patients with type 2 diabetes:

* Be alert to changes in your feet. You may experience pain, a loss of sensation or even balance problems; these can be signs that DPN may be developing.

* See a medical professional at the first sign of a problem, including foot pain or numbness. Visit your primary care doctor, a podiatrist or a neurologist.

* Talk to your doctor about DPN, and ask if he or she is concerned about it. If so, ask if you would benefit from testing to prove the condition is present, or if your foot pain may have other causes.

* Discuss therapies that not only treat your discomfort, but also slow the progression of neuropathy.

It’s important for patients to seek out doctors with experience treating DPN, Levine says. Communication and early intervention are key, he adds. “The earlier people take an active role in their disease, the better they will be in the long run.”

To learn more about DPN, visit www.diabetes.org, www.neuropathy.org or www.diabeticconnect.com.

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