Diabetic Foot Care
DIABETIC FOOT & LIMB PROTECTION
Diabetic foot care focuses on protecting the feet, skin, nails, circulation, and mobility of patients with diabetes. Care may include foot checks, wound-risk monitoring, pressure reduction, circulation awareness, and early evaluation before small changes become more serious.
- Foot checks help catch problems early
- Diabetes can affect nerves and healing
- Pressure and circulation may increase risk
- Early care helps protect mobility
Evaluation & Next Steps
- Clear severity assessment and next steps
- Supportive care and recovery guidance
- Care across 4 Las Vegas locations
Call: (702) 703-4340
Hours: Mon–Fri: 8am–5pm
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Quick Summary
Key takeaway: Diabetic foot care helps patients with diabetes monitor small foot changes early, reduce pressure and wound risk, and get timely evaluation when circulation, sensation, skin, nail, or limb concerns appear.
Evaluation usually focuses on skin condition, nail changes, calluses, pressure areas, wounds, sensation, circulation, footwear, foot shape, and whether additional wound, vascular, orthotic, or limb-preservation care may be needed.
Overview
What is Diabetic Foot Care?
Diabetic foot care is the ongoing evaluation and protection of the feet in patients with diabetes. It may include checking the skin and nails, looking for pressure areas, reviewing wounds or sores, monitoring sensation, discussing footwear, and identifying signs that circulation or foot structure may be contributing to risk.
Why Early Evaluation Matters
Because diabetes can affect feeling, blood flow, skin health, and healing, a blister, callus, nail problem, or small sore may become harder to manage if it is ignored. Early evaluation helps determine whether the concern can be managed conservatively or whether wound, vascular, infection, or limb-preservation care should be considered. Open sores or delayed-healing wounds may need evaluation for diabetic foot ulcers.
Symptoms
Patients with diabetes should seek foot and ankle evaluation when they notice new skin changes, nail problems, sores, swelling, redness, drainage, numbness, tingling, warmth, color changes, or changes in foot shape or stability.
Cuts, Blisters, or Sores
Small cuts, blisters, or open areas can become more serious when sensation, circulation, or healing is affected.
Redness, Swelling, or Drainage
Increasing redness, warmth, drainage, odor, or swelling may suggest irritation, infection risk, or worsening inflammation.
Numbness, Tingling, or Burning
Reduced feeling, burning, tingling, or numbness can make it harder to notice injuries, pressure areas, or shoe irritation.
Calluses or Foot Shape Changes
Corns, calluses, arch changes, instability, or new pressure points may increase wound risk and should be evaluated.
Seek care now if…
Seek prompt evaluation if a foot problem is rapidly worsening, has spreading redness, increasing drainage, foul odor, fever, severe pain, black tissue, exposed bone, new numbness, or major color change.
Causes & Risk Factors
Diabetes can increase foot risk when nerve changes, circulation problems, pressure, dry skin, nail changes, deformity, wounds, or delayed healing make the feet more vulnerable.
Common Contributors
- Reduced protective sensation
- Pressure points or shoe friction
- Poor circulation or PAD
- Dry skin, cracks, or nail problems
- Corns, calluses, cuts, or blisters
- Foot deformity or Charcot-type changes
The cause is not always obvious from appearance alone. Evaluation may be needed when a foot concern is recurrent, slow to improve, associated with numbness, or linked to circulation or pressure problems.
Risk Factors
- Diabetes or neuropathy
- Peripheral artery disease
- Prior wounds or slow healing
- Foot deformity or pressure points
- Poor footwear fit
- Smoking or immune suppression
Diagnosis
Evaluation focuses on identifying foot changes early and understanding whether sensation, circulation, pressure, skin health, nail changes, wounds, or deformity may be increasing risk.
Typical Evaluation
- Review diabetes and wound history
- Check skin, nails, toes, and heels
- Assess sensation, pulses, and circulation
- Review footwear and pressure areas
- Evaluate wounds or infection signs
- Coordinate vascular or wound care when needed
What to Bring
- Current medication list
- Diabetes or vascular history
- Prior wound or infection records
- Recent imaging or lab results
- Shoes, inserts, or offloading devices
Treatment Options
Treatment depends on the specific concern and risk level. Some issues may be managed with monitoring, pressure relief, footwear changes, nail or skin care guidance, or orthotics. Wounds, infection concerns, circulation problems, or advanced limb-risk issues may require coordinated evaluation.
Related care: Treatment planning may include diabetic foot checks, pressure reduction, custom orthotics, wound care, circulation evaluation, and coordinated foot, ankle, and vascular care when risk is higher.
Early Care & Monitoring
- Routine foot checks
- Skin and nail monitoring
- Daily inspection guidance
- Risk-based follow-up
Pressure Reduction
- Shoe fit review
- Custom orthotics when appropriate
- Offloading for high-pressure areas
- Footwear and insert guidance
Wound or Infection Concerns
- Wound evaluation
- Infection monitoring
- Imaging or testing if needed
- Limb-risk planning
Circulation Evaluation
- Blood-flow screening
- PAD evaluation when appropriate
- Delayed-healing review
- Vascular care coordination
Recovery
Diabetic foot care is ongoing. Progress depends on daily inspection, pressure control, footwear, blood sugar management, circulation awareness, wound prevention, and timely follow-up when new changes appear.
What Helps Most
- Daily checks: Look at both feet, including the bottoms and between the toes.
- Footwear protection: Wear shoes that fit well and avoid barefoot walking.
- Pressure control: Reduce rubbing, callus buildup, and high-pressure areas.
- Circulation awareness: Report color changes, coldness, or delayed healing.
- Early evaluation: Do not wait for sores, swelling, or drainage to worsen.
When to Follow Up
- New wound or sore: Any open area should be checked early.
- More redness or swelling: Changes around the foot should not be ignored.
- New numbness or tingling: Sensation changes may increase injury risk.
- Foot shape changes: Swelling, instability, or arch collapse needs evaluation.
- Delayed healing: Slow improvement may require wound or vascular assessment.
Frequently Asked Questions
Diabetes can affect sensation, circulation, skin health, nail health, foot structure, and healing. Diabetic foot care helps identify small problems early before they become harder to treat.
Many patients with diabetes benefit from regular foot checks, and patients with neuropathy, poor circulation, prior wounds, deformity, or delayed healing may need closer follow-up. Your provider can recommend an interval based on your risk level.
Do not ignore sores, blisters, calluses, redness, swelling, drainage, odor, warmth, color changes, numbness, tingling, new pain, nail problems, or changes in foot shape or stability.
No. Diabetic foot care is broader and may include prevention, monitoring, skin and nail checks, pressure reduction, circulation awareness, and early evaluation. Wound care focuses more specifically on open sores, ulcers, delayed healing, drainage, or tissue breakdown.
Yes. Poor circulation can affect healing and may contribute to foot wounds or delayed recovery. When circulation is a concern, vascular evaluation may be recommended.
Seek urgent medical care for rapidly worsening redness or swelling, fever, severe pain, black tissue, a deep wound, spreading infection signs, or a wound where bone may be visible.
Locations
LVVIS West Side Consultation Office
8930 W Sunset Rd, Suite 350
Las Vegas, NV 89148
Consultations and vascular evaluations
LV2 Limb & Vascular Division
8930 W Sunset Rd, Suite 350
Las Vegas, NV 89148
Limb preservation and podiatry partnership care
LVVIS East Procedure Office
2250 E Flamingo Rd, Suite 100
Las Vegas, NV 89119
Procedures, diagnostics, and circulatory care
LVVIS West Side Surgical Center
6120 S Fort Apache Rd, Suite 100
Las Vegas, NV 89148
Advanced vascular and interventional procedures