Diabetic foot ulcers
NHS Fife: Diabetic foot guidance NHS Lothian: Diabetic foot infection guidance
Treatment of diabetic foot ulcers
Prescribing Notes:
- Please refer to local guidance on management of foot ulcers.
- NHS Borders (LINK BEING UPDATED)
- NHS Fife diabetic foot guidance
- NHS Lothian diabetic foot infection guidance
- When selecting an antibiotic consider risk factors for Clostridium difficile infection (CDI). Treatment with co-amoxiclav or ciprofloxacin or clindamycin has a higher association with subsequent CDI, than flucloxacillin or doxycycline or co-trimoxazole.
- Antibiotics are not required for ulceration without surrounding skin infection.
- Consider need to investigate bone infection in diabetic patients or those with chronic ulceration.
- Antibiotics alone will not heal diabetic foot ulcers. All patients with diabetic foot ulcers should be managed in a multidisciplinary foot-care setting. Attention must also be given to diabetic control, peripheral circulation, pressure relief, suitable dressings and regular debridement by a podiatrist. Antibiotic therapy should be initiated in the diabetic foot clinic guided by specimens taken by the diabetic podiatrist.
- Superficial swabs may grow colonising organisms and not reflect the infecting organism.
- Occasionally polymicrobial infection is present and may require antibiotics to cover Pseudomonas, S. aureus and anaerobes unless pathogen is known from deep sample.
- Seven days of antibiotics are usually sufficient for superficial skin infection associated with skin ulceration. If bony infection is confirmed treatment may need to be based on response up to 4-6 weeks.
History Notes
15/12/2021
East Region Formulary content agreed.