Nurses are required to make quantitative, evidence-based observations when implementing diabetic foot care. This study aimed to clarify the characteristics of lower-limb ischemia in patients with type 2 diabetes using subjective and objective symptoms and physiological indicators and whether the physiological characteristics are established as predictive indicators of arterial obstruction. Fifty Japanese patients with type 2 diabetes (100 limbs) were classified into three groups using the ankle–brachial index (ABI). Patients with an ABI of ≤0.69 had subjective and objective symptoms of blood flow disturbance, such as pain at rest, cold sensation, pale skin, and imperceptibility to the dorsalis pedis artery. Blood flow in the first toe was the lowest. Binary logistic regression analysis established hallux perfusion as a predictive model for lower-limb arterial occlusion (odds ratio = 0.979, 95% confidence interval 0.900–0.999). Thus, when nurses perform diabetic foot care, it is necessary to evaluate not only subjective and objective symptoms, but also blood flow at the microcirculatory level of the great toe.
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