Skeletal Lesions and Arterial Calcifications of the Feet in Diabetics

Abstract
A radiological study of the feet was performed in 162 unselected diabetic patients with gangrene. They were compared with 59 diabetic patients without gangrene, 45 patients with familial amyloidosis and polyneuropathy and 30 healthy controls. The patients with familial amyloidosis had severe distal neuropathy but normal oral glucose tolerance test curves. Radiographic findings, e.g. skeletal destructions (diabetic osteopathy) and arterial calcification of the medial type were classified without knowledge of the clinical findings. Osteopathy was more common in diabetic patients with gangrene than in the other groups of patients. Medial arterial calcification was more common among diabetics with gangrene compared to patients with amyloidosis and to controls. There were no differences between diabetics without gangrene and patients with amyloidosis, but both of these groups had more calcifications than the controls. Our study suggests that diabetic osteopathy is not caused by peripheral neuropathy per se. The skeletal and skin lesions in diabetic patients are probably equivalent lesions localized to different tissues in the feet. It has been suggested that medial degeneration in the arterial wall is due to neuropathy. In agreement with this suggestion, the patients with familial amyloidosis and neuropathy had medial calcification. However, in diabetic patients this does not exclude other etiological agents.