Low handgrip strength is associated with diabetic foot disease in geriatric patients with type 2 diabetes

This study aims to reveal the prevalence of low handgrip strength in older patients with type 2 diabetes who have diabetic foot disease and to assess the association of handgrip strength with diabetic foot disease in older patients with type 2 diabetes. Eighty-nine geriatric patients with diabetic f...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Turkish journal of medical sciences Vol. 52; no. 6; pp. 1854 - 1862
Main Authors: İmre, Eren, Koçakgöl, Neşe, İmre, Erdi
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Turkey Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (TUBITAK) 01-01-2022
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Summary:This study aims to reveal the prevalence of low handgrip strength in older patients with type 2 diabetes who have diabetic foot disease and to assess the association of handgrip strength with diabetic foot disease in older patients with type 2 diabetes. Eighty-nine geriatric patients with diabetic foot ulcers and 69 patients without diabetic foot ulcers who presented to the endocrinology outpatient clinic between August 2020 and November 2021 were included in the study. The exclusion criteria were the usage of steroids, stroke-induced quadriplegia, myopathy, disability, hemodialysis treatment, type 1 diabetes, patients under 65 years of age, and history of malignancy. The information of drugs administered, demographic and clinical data were obtained from the patient files. The Wagner score was used to evaluate the severity of ulcers. A handgrip strength test was performed with a handheld digital dynamometer. For females <16 kg (kilograms), for males <27 kg was accepted as low handgrip strength. Forty-nine patients (55.1%) with diabetic foot ulcers and 25 (36.2%) patients without diabetic foot ulcers had low handgrip strength. There was a significant difference between two groups (p = 0.019). The patients with diabetic foot ulcers who had lower handgrip strength had higher rates of peripheral artery disease than patients with diabetic foot ulcers who had normal handgrip strength (p = 0.02 and p = 0.009, respectively). The patients with diabetic foot ulcers who had lower handgrip strength, had significantly higher rates of Wagner scores 4 and 5 and lower rates of Wagner scores 1 and 3 (p = 0.039). Older patients with type 2 diabetes and diabetic foot disease had a higher rate of low handgrip strength. Low handgrip strength was significantly associated with the occurrence of diabetic foot ulcers and directly correlated with Wagner score in geriatric patients with type 2 diabetes.
ISSN:1300-0144
1303-6165
1300-0144
DOI:10.55730/1300-0144.5532