Many people make it through their days without worrying about every little minor cut, scrape, ache or sensation. But for those with diabetes, foot care is a whole different ball game. Foot care for diabetes patients involves around-the-clock vigilance and solid diabetic foot care tips. These can prevent debilitating and life-altering diabetic foot complications, like severe mobility limitations, ulcers and even gangrene and limb loss. Let’s explore how a little goes a long way when it comes to foot health and diabetes.
Low-Impact Exercises and Stretches
Exercises and stretches that target diabetic neuropathy is one of the best strategies for protecting feet with diabetes.
To keep your feet as strong as possible, you need to stimulate blood flow and make sure nutrient-rich blood reaches your lower extremities. This can help wounds heal. Even if you have lost sensation in your feet, your muscles should still function properly enough to do light exercises.
Studies show that non-weight bearing and low-impact exercises and stretches can also improve motor score and help patients with activities of daily living (i.e.: basic chores, climbing stairs, etc).
To get started, check out the best exercises and stretches for diabetes.
Daily Inspections, Foot Hygiene and Nails
Preventing foot ulcers in diabetes patients involves frequently examining your own feet. A chiropodist should also do this for you, but more on that later!
Look at your feet multiple times per day. Are there any new wounds? Discolouration? Do your feet feel cold to the touch? Do you possibly have a fungal infection? Any abnormality should be noted.
Practice top-notch foot hygiene, as well. You can follow this general foot hygiene guide, but please note that diabetes patients are often advised not to cut their own toenails.
Schedule Regular Foot Assessments and Foot Care Services
At-home tips are great, but the truth is most diabetics need help managing foot issues. If you have diabetes, cutting your own toenails is often a bad idea because vision loss and neuropathy can cause you to not notice if you cut too deeply. Diabetes also affects the eyesight, so you may not notice any developing issues. And since diabetes causes circulation to the feet, these issues cannot properly heal. That’s why one of the best services a chiropodist can perform is a medical pedicure that’s specially catered towards diabetes patients.
Your chiropodist can also:
- Give advice on proper foot care. This often means investing in orthopedic footwear.
- Provide wound care.
- Assess for diabetic neuropathy — how severe is it?
- Assess your blood circulation.
- Inspect for potential ulcers.
If you live in the Greater Toronto Area, one of our Toronto chiropodists can perform routine diabetic foot care and diabetic foot assessments to help prevent diabetic foot complications. Click here to learn more about our foot care services for diabetes patients.
Additional Diabetic Foot Care Tips
- Never go barefoot, even at home. Wear house shoes or orthopedic slippers. Being barefoot is too risky for diabetes patients, as if you stub your toe or cut yourself, the wound can’t properly heal.
- Avoid direct heat sources, like a really hot foot bath. It can dry out your skin and make your feet more susceptible to cracking.
- Consider custom orthotics by learning when you might need them.