วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 24 พฤษภาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Tattoos and Diabetes

Diabetic Feet :

I was recently asked a interrogate on our website that I conception deserved a lengthy answer.
J.C. Of Buffalo, Ny asks: "I have diabetes and I take insulin. Is there any reason I should be involved about getting a tattoo?"

So, J.C, you're mental about getting a tattoo, but you have diabetes. Is this a good idea? Well, in most cases it's not a problem. But there are some things you should be mental about before while and after the inking process.

During my 18 years in podiatric institution I conception I had seen everything, that is until one day I was called to the urgency group for a consultation. A 45 year old female diabetic sick person decided to get a tattoo on the top of her foot. She said she conception nothing of it at the time. It was a rendering of her late cat whom she loved so much. About 3 days after the inking she began to institute some redness colse to the site. She followed the directions given to her, but the redness got worse. She applied more ointment but now she could see the redness spreading away from the tattoo. She consulted her tattoo artist who intuitively had her call her doctor who sent her immediately to the urgency department.

Diabetic Feet :Tattoos and Diabetes

A tattoo for all practical purposes is an intentional wound. This young woman had gotten an infection and because she had the circulation of an 80 year old and because of neuropathy she did not feel any pain. What she did have was an abscess on the top of her foot. This led to the circulation becoming worse leading to gangrene of the toes. She finally lost half her foot. I was able to save the remaining foot, by cleaning out the infected bone and soft tissue, and using high tech state of the art wound curative products and treatments.

Let's discuss a puny about diabetes first. Diabetes is the leading cause of non-traumatic foot and leg amputations in the United States and almost 14 to 24 percent of patients with diabetes who institute a foot ulcer and infections go on to have an amputation. Research, however, has shown that the improvement of a foot ulcer is preventable.

Anyone who has diabetes can institute a foot ulcer or an infection. Native Americans, African Americans, Hispanics and older men are more likely to institute ulcers. People who use insulin are at a higher risk of developing a foot ulcer, as are patients with diabetes-related kidney, eye, and heart disease. Being overweight and using alcohol and tobacco also play a role.

Diabetic complications institute due to a blend of factors, such as lack of feeling in the foot, poor circulation, foot deformities, irritation (such as friction or pressure), and trauma, as well as period of diabetes. Patients who have diabetes for many years can institute neuropathy, a reduced or complete lack of feeling in the feet and legs due to nerve damage caused by elevated blood sugar levels over time. The nerve damage often can occur without pain and one may not even be aware of the problem. "

"Vascular disease can complicate a curative tattoo, reducing the body's ability to heal and expanding the risk for an infection. Elevations in blood glucose can cut the body's ability to fight off a inherent infection and also slow down the whole curative process."

Most tattoos do not get infected; however if your doctor diagnoses an infection, a treatment program of antibiotics, wound care, and maybe hospitalization will be necessary.
necessary.

The science of wound care has industrialized significantly over the past ten years. The old conception of "let the air get at it" is now known to be harmful to healing. We know that wounds along with tattoos and ulcers heal faster, with a lower risk of infection, if they are kept covered and moist. The use of full drive betadine, peroxide, whirlpools and soaking are not recommended, as this could lead to additional complications.

Appropriate wound administration includes the use of dressings and topically-applied medications. These range from general saline to industrialized products that have been shown to be extremely efficient in curative problem tattoos.
For a tattoo to heal there must be enough circulation to the inked area. A circulation master (vascular surgeon) or a podiatrist can rule circulation levels in the feet and legs with noninvasive tests.
Healing time depends on a variety of factors, such as tattoo size and location, pressure on the area from walking or standing, swelling, circulation, blood glucose levels, wound care, and what is being applied to the wound. curative may occur within weeks or wish some months.

The old saying, "an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure" was never as true as it is when preventing a diabetic tattoo complication.

Diabetic Feet :Tattoos and Diabetes

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