Foot diabetes problem
Diabetes also can lower the amount of blood flow in your feet. Not having enough blood flowing to your legs and feet can make it hard for a sore or an infection
Date: 8/4/2020 10:46:18 AM ( 5 y ) ... viewed 239 times After some time, diabetes may cause nerve harm, likewise called diabetic neuropathy, that can cause shivering and torment, and can cause you to lose feeling in your feet. At the point when you lose feeling in your feet, you may not feel a rock inside your sock or a rankle on your foot, which can prompt cuts and injuries. Cuts and wounds can get tainted.
Diabetes likewise can bring down the measure of blood stream in your feet. Not having enough blood streaming to your legs and feet can make it difficult for a sore or a contamination to recuperate. Here and there, a terrible disease never recuperates. The contamination may prompt gangrene.
Gangrene and foot ulcers that don't show signs of improvement with treatment can prompt a removal of your toe, foot, or part of your leg. A specialist may play out a removal to keep an awful contamination from spreading to the remainder of your body, and to spare your life. Great foot care is critical to forestall genuine contaminations and gangrene.
Albeit uncommon, nerve harm from diabetes can prompt changes looking like your feet, for example, Charcot's foot. Charcot's foot may begin with redness, warmth, and expanding. Afterward, bones in your feet and toes can move or break, which can make your feet have an odd shape, for example, a "rocker base."
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