Abstract
The microvascular response of foot skin to minor thermal injury and the skin of the anterior abdominal wall to injury from a needle was assessed by laser Doppler flowmetry in 23 patients with type I diabetes and 21 healthy control subjects. After minor thermal injury mean (SD) maximum skin blood flow was significantly lower in the diabetic group than the control group (0–53 (0.11) v 0.72 (0.10), V., in arbitrary units of flow, respectively, p<0.001) and was negatively correlated with the duration of diabetes (r= -0.60; p<0.01). After needle injury a similar pattern of impairment was seen, the peak flow value recorded being significantly lower in the diabetic group than the control group (0.28 (0.10) v 0.41 (0.09), V., respectively; p<0.001) and also negatively correlated with the duration of diabetes (r=-0.61; p<0.01). There was a significant relation between the response obtained at the two sites of injury in the diabetic group (r = +0.72, p<0.001) but not in the control group. The impairment in response was not related to diabetic control and was not explicable in terms of a reduction in superficial skin capillary density. The inability of the diabetic skin microvasculature to respond normally to injury may be an important factor in the development of foot ulceration that often follows minor trauma. © 1986, British Medical Journal Publishing Group. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Rayman, G., Williams, S. A., Spencer, P. D., Smaje, L. H., Wise, P. H., & Tooke, J. E. (1986). Impaired microvascular hyperaemic response to minor skin trauma in type I diabetes. British Medical Journal (Clinical Research Ed.), 292(6531), 1295–1298. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.292.6531.1295
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