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Scholar Results 1 - 10 of about 98 citing Armstrong: Activity patterns of patients with diabetic foot ulceration. (0.10 sec) 

Inter-society consensus for the management of peripheral arterial disease (TASC II …

- sirweb.org [PDF] 
L Norgren, WR Hiatt, JA Dormandy, MR Nehler, KA … - Journal of Vascular …, 2007 - Elsevier
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Cited by 613 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 16 versions

[PDF] Diabetic foot disorders


RG Frykberg, MPH DPM, DG Armstrong, J DPM, DPM … - Data Trace - apwca.com
Page 1. DIABETIC FOOT DISORDERS A Clinical Practice Guideline Robert G. Frykberg, DPM,
MPH, David G. Armstrong, DPM, John Giurini, DPM, Annemarie Edwards, DPM, Marc Kravette,
DPM, Steven Kravitz, DPM, Charles Ross, DPM, James Stavosky, DPM, ...
Cited by 166 - Related articles - View as HTML - BL Direct - All 18 versions

Treatment for diabetic foot ulcers

- ptolemy.ca [PDF] 
PR Cavanagh, BA Lipsky, AW Bradbury, G Botek - The Lancet, 2005 - Elsevier
People with diabetes develop foot ulcers because of neuropathy (sensory, motor, and autonomic
deficits), ischaemia, or both. The initiating injury may be from acute mechanical or thermal trauma
or from repetitively or continuously applied mechanical stress. Patients with clinically ...
Cited by 94 - Related articles - All 21 versions

The diabetic foot: from art to science. The 18th Camillo Golgi lecture

- ptolemy.ca [PDF] 
AJM Boulton - Diabetologia, 2004 - Springer
Diabetic foot ulceration represents a major medical, social and economic problem all over the
world. While more than 5% of diabetic patients have a histo- ry of foot ulceration, the cumulative
lifetime incidence may be as high as 15%. Ethnic differences exist in both ulcer and ...
Cited by 90 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 9 versions

A randomized trial of two irremovable off-loading devices in the management of …

- diabetesjournals.org
IA Katz, A Harlan, B Miranda-Palma, L Prieto- … - Diabetes Care, 2005 - Am Diabetes Assoc
RESULTS—The proportions of patients with ulcers that healed within 12 weeks in the iTCC and
TCC groups were 80 and 74%, respectively (94 and 93%, respectively, when patients who were
lost to follow-up were excluded). Survival analysis (healing rates) was statistically ...
Cited by 85 - Related articles - All 8 versions

Evaluation of removable and irremovable cast walkers in the healing of diabetic …

- diabetesjournals.org
DG Armstrong, LA Lavery, S Wu, AJM Boulton - Diabetes Care, 2005 - Am Diabetes Assoc
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—We randomly assigned 50 patients with University of
Texas grade 1A diabetic foot ulcerations into one of two off-loading treatment groups: an RCW
or the same RCW wrapped with a cohesive bandage (iTCC) so patients could not easily ...
Cited by 76 - Related articles - All 6 versions

Diabetic foot disorders: a clinical practice guideline (2006 revision)


RG Frykberg, T Zgonis, DG Armstrong, VR Driver, … - The journal of Foot and …, 2006 - Elsevier
Foot ulcerations, infections, Charcot neuroarthropathy, and peripheral arterial disease frequently
result in gangrene and lower limb amputation. Consequently, foot disorders are leading causes
of hospitalization for persons with diabetes and account for billion-dollar expenditures ...
Cited by 55 - Related articles - All 2 versions

Total contact casting of the diabetic foot in daily practice

- hi.is [PDF] 
MH Nabuurs-Franssen, R Sleegers, MSP Huijberts, … - Diabetes Care, 2005 - Am Diabetes Assoc
RESULTS— Ninety percent of all nonischemic ulcers without infection and 87% with infection
healed in the cast (NS). In patients with PAD but without critical limb ischemia, 69% of the ulcers
without infection and 36% with infection healed (P < 0.01). In multivariate analyses, PAD, ...
Cited by 41 - Related articles - All 9 versions

Variability in activity may precede diabetic foot ulceration


DG Armstrong, LA Lavery, K Holtz-Neiderer, MJ … - Diabetes Care, 2004 - Am Diabetes Assoc
RESULTS—Eight subjects ulcerated during the evaluation period of 37.1 ± 12.3 weeks. The
average daily activity was significantly lower in individuals who ulcerated compared with individuals
who did not ulcerate (809.0 ± 612.2 vs. 1,394.5 ± 868.5, P = 0.03). Furthermore, there was ...
Cited by 34 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 8 versions

Neuropathic diabetic foot ulcers


AJM Boulton, RS Kirsner, L Vileikyte - 新英格兰医药杂志, 2004 - journal.shouxi.net
Foot ulcers develop in approximately 15 percent of patients with diabetes, and foot disorders
are a leading cause of hospitalization among such patients.1,2,3 Eighty-five percent of
lower-limb amputations in patients with diabetes are preceded by foot ulceration,2 ...
Cited by 147 - Related articles - Cached - BL Direct - All 10 versions


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