Department of Thoracic and Vascular Surgery, Antwerp University Hospital (UZA), Edegem, Belgium.
Department of Endocrinology, Diabetology and Metabolism, Antwerp University Hospital (UZA), Edegem, Belgium.
Acta Clin Belg. 2022 Feb;77(1):79-85. doi: 10.1080/17843286.2020.1800315. Epub 2020 Jul 29.
Malnutrition has a detrimental effect on wound healing; hence, it might influence the outcome in people with a diabetic foot ulcer (DFU).The aim of this manuscript is to overview studies that describe the prevalence of malnutrition in DFU patients and assess the relation between malnutrition, DFU severity, and outcome.
A literature review was performed. Malnutrition had to be defined by anthropometry and/or validated screening and assessment tools.
Five papers were included: one RCT, three prospective cohort studies and one retrospective observational study. A substantial number of patients were at risk for malnutrition (49%-70%) or were malnourished (15%-62%). In one study, nutritional status was related to DFU severity. Three authors demonstrated a negative influence of malnutrition on outcome. Two studies examined the prevalence of malnutrition after six months, but did not detect a decline in malnutrition rates.
Despite a large heterogeneity, all papers indicated that malnutrition is highly prevalent among DFU patients. Notwithstanding the lack of unequivocal evidence, malnutrition might have a negative influence on DFU outcome. Therefore, clinicians should pay attention to the nutritional status of people with a DFU.: BMI: Body Mass Index; DFU: Diabetic Foot Ulcer; DM: Diabetes Mellitus; GNRI: Geriatric Nutritional Risk Index; HbA1c: Glycated Hemoglobin; IWGDF: International Working Group on the Diabetic Foot; LEA: Lower Extremity Amputation; MNA: Mini Nutritional Assessment; MNA-SF: Mini Nutritional Assessment-Short Form; MUST: Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool; NRS-2002: Nutritional Risk Screening-2002; PAD: Peripheral Arterial Disease; RCT: randomized controlled trial; SGA: Subjective Global Assessment.
营养不良对伤口愈合有不利影响;因此,它可能会影响糖尿病足溃疡(DFU)患者的结局。本文旨在综述描述 DFU 患者营养不良患病率的研究,并评估营养不良、DFU 严重程度和结局之间的关系。
进行了文献复习。营养不良必须通过人体测量和/或经过验证的筛查和评估工具来定义。
纳入了 5 篇论文:1 项 RCT、3 项前瞻性队列研究和 1 项回顾性观察性研究。相当数量的患者存在营养不良风险(49%-70%)或营养不良(15%-62%)。在一项研究中,营养状况与 DFU 严重程度相关。有 3 位作者证明了营养不良对结局的负面影响。有 2 项研究检查了 6 个月后的营养不良患病率,但未发现营养不良率下降。
尽管存在很大的异质性,但所有论文都表明 DFU 患者中营养不良的患病率很高。尽管缺乏明确的证据,但营养不良可能对 DFU 结局产生负面影响。因此,临床医生应注意 DFU 患者的营养状况。:BMI:体重指数;DFU:糖尿病足溃疡;DM:糖尿病;GNRI:老年营养风险指数;HbA1c:糖化血红蛋白;IWGDF:国际糖尿病足工作组;LEA:下肢截肢;MNA:微量营养评估;MNA-SF:微量营养评估-简短形式;MUST:营养不良通用筛查工具;NRS-2002:营养风险筛查-2002;PAD:周围动脉疾病;RCT:随机对照试验;SGA:主观整体评估。