The performance of the Rydel-Seiffer graduated tuning fork was examined in healthy subjects and in various groups of diabetic patients in order to evaluate its efficacy for identifying patients whose loss of vibration sensation may expose them to the risk of foot injury. Vibration perception score measured with the tuning fork declined with age (p less than 0.001) in the control subjects. It correlated well (r = -0.90, p less than 0.001) with the thresholds obtained with an electromagnetic instrument (Vibrameter) in diabetic patients, in whom vibration perception score was impaired compared with control subjects (4.0 +/- 1.8 (+/- SD) vs 5.4 +/- 1.4, p less than 0.001). Age-related Rydel-Seiffer tuning fork vibration sensation was impaired in 79% of 38 ulcerated feet of 26 patients. The tuning fork score was less than or equal to 4.0 in 95% of the ulcerated feet. We conclude that the Rydel-Seiffer graduated tuning fork is a suitable tool for screening for sensation loss and that diabetic patients with a tuning-fork score of less than or equal to 4.0 are vulnerable to ulceration.
Twenty-four hour ambulatory blood pressure and heart rate profiles of 24 patients with diabetes were monitored in order to assess the effect of autonomic neuropathy on 24-h haemodynamic profiles. Eighteen patients had abnormal cardiovascular reflexes. Mean arterial pressure rose at night in six of the patients with autonomic neuropathy and fell by less than or equal to 5 mmHg in seven. In the remaining five patients with autonomic neuropathy and in the six diabetic patients with normal cardiovascular reflexes, the fall in nocturnal mean arterial pressure was comparable to that of 11 non-diabetic patients with essential hypertension. Median 24-h mean arterial pressure was similar in all four groups of diabetic patients. Prevalence of autonomic symptoms was not related to the change in blood pressure in those with autonomic neuropathy. Twenty-seven months after monitoring, three fatal and five severe non-fatal cardiovascular or renal events had occurred in four of the six patients with a rise in nocturnal blood pressure, compared with one non-fatal event in those with a small fall and no severe events in those with a pronounced fall (p = 0.02). Blood pressure rises at night in certain diabetic patients with abnormal cardiovascular reflexes and the nocturnal rise appears to be associated with a poor prognosis.
Patients can only examine and handle their own feet if they have adequate visual acuity and joint mobility. We therefore studied the physical capacity of patients with neuropathy to perform the preventive footcare measures previously taught. The study included three groups of diabetic outpatients, comparable for age and duration of diabetes: (1) 38 patients with neuropathic ulcers; (2) 21 patients with neuropathy, but no ulcers; (3) 30 patients without neuropathy. Visual acuity and joint mobility, expressed as minimum eye-metatarsum and heel-buttock distances, did not differ between uncomplicated neuropathic and non-neuropathic patients: visual acuity was sufficient in 95% of neuropathic patients without ulceration and in 87% of non-neuropathic patients; joint mobility was in the normal range in both groups. However, 71% of complicated neuropathic patients had insufficient visual acuity for correct foot examination, and their joint mobility was reduced compared with uncomplicated neuropathic and non-neuropathic patients.
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