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Learn the Facts About the Diabetic Ulcer and How to Treat it.

For most people suffering with diabetes, a diabetic ulcer is a far too common occurrence. These painful wounds on the skin, often in the legs, can be one of the worst and most noticeable side effects of having diabetes and if you have experienced even one then you have probably looked long and hard for a good treatment that can help exacerbate the pain and suffering associated with the common diabetic ulcer.

Before you learn how to treat a diabetic ulcer, you should first familiarize yourself with what a diabetic ulcer actually is. Most commonly, it is classified as a chronic wound and is very similar in shape and look to a venous ulcer. Usually, ulcers appear on the skin of your various appendages such as your arms and legs, although they have also been seen to appear on the torso among other places. Essentially what happens when an ulcer forms is the veins and blood vessels have sustained some type of damage which prevents the blood from circulating properly in those affected regions. Without proper blood circulation, the area quickly becomes a cesspool of blood cells, white blood cells, and a variety of other microorganisms that have escaped from the ruptured veins and vessels and subsequently go to work creating a massive ulcer.

Now that you have been acquainted with the basics of the ulcer, you should know some of the common practices to treat them. Even though the chances of a diabetic ulcer reoccurring in the same spot are nearly 50%, doctors around the world still pursue treatment. One of the most common current treatments is compression therapy with the use of a tightly fitted boot or bandage around the area that needs to be treated. However, even though compression therapy for a diabetic ulcer is relatively successful, we are already starting to see even more success with the use of artificial skin consisting of various polymers, other skin cells and growth factors which can heal a venous diabetic ulcer in an even timelier manner.

 





 

 

 


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