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Dr. Neelabh • Orthopedic Surgeon

Diabetic Foot and Limb Salvage in Delhi

Diabetic Foot and Limb Salvage in Delhi focuses on prompt infection control, smart off‑loading, and fixation strategies that preserve limb function. Dr. Neelabh’s pathway integrates debridement, targeted antibiotics, soft‑tissue coverage, pressure redistribution, and stabilization (external fixators or internal fixation as appropriate)—so wounds can heal and you can mobilize safely. We do not provide in‑house physiotherapy; we share written protocols and coordinate with your physiotherapist for phased, criteria‑based recovery.

Infection control • Off‑loading • Fixation/arthrodesis • Soft‑tissue coverage • Prevention & follow‑up

Diabetic Foot and Limb Salvage in Delhi - infection control, off-loading, fixation
Save the limb, protect mobility

About Diabetic Foot & Limb Salvage

Diabetic foot problems arise from a combination of neuropathy (reduced sensation), ischemia (reduced blood flow), and infection. Minor wounds can quickly worsen if pressure persists or bacteria gain access, especially when blood sugar is poorly controlled. Limb salvage is a focused, multi‑step plan to control infection, reduce pressure at the wound, restore stability or alignment when needed, and rebuild skin coverage—so the foot can heal and you can keep moving.

Our approach is pragmatic and team‑based. We coordinate with diabetology for glycemic control, infectious disease (ID) for culture‑directed antibiotics, vascular surgery for revascularization when needed, and plastic surgery for complex coverage. As Orthopedic Surgeons, we lead off‑loading, stabilization, and reconstruction decisions that determine whether wounds can close and stay closed.

Overview of diabetic foot limb salvage pathway in Delhi
Know the risks

Who Is at Risk & Red Flags

Higher risk

Long‑standing diabetes, previous ulcer/amputation, neuropathy, foot deformity, smoking, kidney disease, poor footwear, vision issues.

Warning signs

Redness, warmth, swelling, foul odour, drainage, black tissue, sudden pain in a previously numb foot, fever/chills, spreading streaks.

Urgent care

A new ulcer, a wound that doesn’t improve, or a swollen hot foot—especially if you cannot feel pain—needs immediate assessment.

Early action prevents hospitalisation and amputation. Don’t wait for severe pain—neuropathy can mask it.

Measure, don’t guess

Evaluation & Staging

  • Clinical exam: Ulcer depth/size, probe‑to‑bone test, cellulitis extent, deformity (bunion, hammertoes, Charcot changes), callus and pressure mapping.
  • Vascular assessment: Pedal pulses, handheld Doppler, ABI/toe pressures; fast referral for revascularization if ischemia suspected.
  • Imaging: X‑rays for bony changes/gas; MRI for osteomyelitis and deep abscess; ultrasound for collections; CT as needed.
  • Lab & cultures: CBC, CRP/ESR; deep tissue/bone cultures after debridement (avoid superficial swabs for decision‑making).
  • Staging systems: Wagner/University of Texas classification to guide urgency and interventions.

We’ll show you where pressure concentrates and how off‑loading and alignment steps will reduce it.

ABI and toe pressure vascular assessment for diabetic foot in Delhi
Start with infection control

Infection Control & Debridement

Infection must be controlled early. We remove dead tissue (debridement), drain abscesses, and obtain deep cultures to target antibiotics properly. If osteomyelitis is suspected, we assess the need for bone debridement, local antibiotic carriers (beads/spacers), and staged reconstruction once infection settles. ID specialists help tailor systemic antibiotics and duration.

Debridement

Sharp removal of necrotic tissue and biofilm reduces bacterial load and promotes granulation.

Local antibiotics

Antibiotic‑loaded beads/spacers deliver high local concentrations with minimal systemic side effects.

Systemic therapy

Culture‑guided IV/PO antibiotics; monitor CBC, renal/hepatic function; adjust to clinical response.

Surgical debridement and culture-guided antibiotics for diabetic foot in Delhi
Take pressure off the wound

Off‑loading, Boots & Footwear

Off‑loading is the cornerstone of ulcer healing. If pressure persists, even perfect dressings fail. We choose the right device for your anatomy and wound location, and align it with your daily routine so you actually use it.

  • Total Contact Cast (TCC): Gold‑standard for plantar forefoot/midfoot ulcers when feasible.
  • Removable walkers/CAM boots: Useful when TCC is contraindicated; patient education ensures compliance.
  • Rocker‑soled footwear & custom insoles: Redistribute pressure; add met pads/heel cups as indicated.
  • Custom bracing: AFO/charcot restraint orthotic walker (CROW) for Charcot stabilization and protection.

We’ll also trim callus and adjust insoles as the foot changes—small tweaks prevent recurrence.

Off-loading walker boot and custom insoles for diabetic foot in Delhi
Close the wound, keep it closed

Soft‑Tissue Coverage & Wound Care

Once infection is controlled and pressure is reduced, we focus on wound closure. Many ulcers respond to serial debridement and dressings; deeper wounds may benefit from negative‑pressure wound therapy (NPWT). Exposed tendon/bone often requires flap coverage from plastic surgery. The aim is durable, well‑vascularized coverage resistant to future breakdown.

Dressings

Moisture‑balanced dressings; silver/iodine as indicated; frequent review to adapt to wound bed changes.

NPWT

Helps granulation and manages exudate; often a bridge to closure or graft/flap.

Flap coverage

Local/regional flaps for exposed bone/tendon; timing coordinated with infection control and off‑loading.

Negative-pressure wound therapy and flap planning in Delhi
Stability wins

Osteomyelitis & Charcot Foot

Probe‑to‑bone or MRI changes suggest osteomyelitis; we address it with debridement plus local/systemic antibiotics and staged reconstruction. Charcot neuroarthropathy causes joint collapse and deformity; early diagnosis and immobilization/off‑loading are crucial. When deformity is unstable or recurrent ulceration occurs, corrective osteotomy/arthrodesis with internal fixation or circular external fixators may be required for a plantigrade, shoe‑able foot.

  • Bone infection: Debridement, local antibiotics (beads/spacers), targeted systemic therapy.
  • Charcot stabilization: CROW/AFO initially; reconstruction (midfoot/hindfoot fusion) if ulceration or instability persists.
  • Vascular input: Revascularization before major reconstruction if perfusion is poor.
Charcot foot stabilization with bracing and reconstruction in Delhi
Fixation & limb salvage

Fixation, Arthrodesis & Limb Salvage

When instability, deformity, or bone loss threatens healing, we use fixation techniques that respect soft tissues and allow protected weight‑bearing. Choices include external fixators (ring/hexapod) for deformity correction or bone transport, internal fixation/arthrodesis for a stable, plantigrade foot, and staged approaches that combine off‑loading with reconstruction. Limb salvage succeeds when pressure, perfusion, infection, and stability are addressed together.

External fixators

Ring/hexapod frames for correction, transport, or temporary stabilization while wounds settle.

Internal fixation/arthrodesis

Midfoot/hindfoot fusion or targeted fixation to achieve durable alignment for shoe wear.

Amputation (select cases)

When salvage risks outweigh benefits, a planned amputation can restore mobility faster with prosthetic rehabilitation. We discuss transparently.

External fixator for diabetic foot deformity correction in Delhi
Comfort with control

Anesthesia & Pain Strategy

We prefer regional anesthesia and multimodal, opioid‑sparing pain control. Clear dosing schedules (paracetamol ± anti‑inflammatories when appropriate) and night‑time comfort measures improve sleep and speed recovery. For older adults, we avoid over‑sedation and monitor for delirium.

  • Regional blocks: Popliteal/saphenous, ankle block, or sciatic/femoral as needed.
  • Simple schedules: Stay ahead of pain and enable safe mobility training.
  • Glycemic control: Pain and infection stress blood sugar—close coordination with diabetology.
Regional anesthesia and multimodal pain strategy for diabetic foot surgery in Delhi
Phased recovery

Rehabilitation & Follow‑Up

We provide a written, phase‑based plan and coordinate with your physiotherapist; we do not provide physiotherapy in‑house. Early goals include edema control, safe transfers, and protected weight‑bearing with off‑loading devices. As infection settles and wounds close, we progress range‑of‑motion, strength, balance, and gradual return to footwear.

  • Week 0–2: Elevation, dressing care, pin‑site care (if frame), protected weight‑bearing with TCC/walker/CROW as indicated.
  • Week 3–6: Begin ROM and light strengthening; adjust off‑loading strategy based on healing.
  • Week 6–12: Progress to supportive footwear/insoles; refine gait and balance.
  • Beyond 12 weeks: Activity increase guided by wound status, imaging, and strength.
Off-loading and gait training plan after diabetic foot surgery in Delhi
Keep it from coming back

Prevention & Recurrence Reduction

Daily foot checks

Look for redness/blisters/cuts; use a mirror or caregiver help; act early if something’s off.

Footwear & insoles

Roomy toe box, no seams over pressure areas, custom insoles for pressure redistribution.

Callus/corn care

Professional trimming—avoid bathroom surgery; keep skin moisturised (not between toes).

Glycemic control

Stable sugars improve immunity and wound healing; coordinate with your diabetologist.

Never walk barefoot. Check shoes for stones or folds before wearing. Replace worn insoles early.

Coverage

Cost & Insurance

Costs depend on infection severity, number of debridements, need for revascularization or flap coverage, off‑loading devices (TCC/CROW/walker), and fixation or fusion procedures. Most insurers cover medically necessary diabetic foot surgery and limb salvage. We verify benefits and provide a transparent estimate before scheduling your Diabetic Foot and Limb Salvage in Delhi.

  • Insurance pre‑authorization & benefits check
  • Clear estimate of out‑of‑pocket costs
  • Cashless/financing options where applicable
Cost and insurance guidance for diabetic foot limb salvage in Delhi
Before your visit

How to Prepare

Records & labs

Bring previous notes, culture reports, imaging (X‑rays/MRI), ABI/toe pressure if done, and your medication list.

Footwear & devices

Bring current shoes/insoles/off‑loading devices; we will assess wear and fit.

Caregiver support

A family member helps with daily dressing, pin‑site care, and off‑loading compliance.

Physio details

We do not provide physiotherapy in‑house; share your physiotherapist’s contact to align written protocols.

Diabetology link

Be ready to coordinate glucose optimization and medication adjustments with your diabetologist.

Clinics & Timings

Where to Consult Dr. Neelabh

Kapoor Medical Centre

E-18, Naraina, New Delhi-110028
🕓 10:00 AM – 2:30 PM

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Jeewan Hospital

2-B, Pusa Road, New Delhi-110005
🕓 3:00 PM – 4:00 PM

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BLK Hospital

A-4-6, Pusa Rd, Near Rajendra Place Metro Station, New Delhi-110005
🕓 4:00 PM – 6:00 PM

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Clinic Intermed

38/16, East Patel Nagar, New Delhi-110008
🕓 6:00 PM – 8:00 PM

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Timings may vary—please call +91‑9810117204 to confirm.

Your questions answered

FAQs

Do all ulcers need surgery?
No. Many heal with debridement, off‑loading, dressings, and glucose control. Surgery is needed for deep infection, exposed bone/tendon, ischemia requiring bypass/stent, or deformity causing recurrent ulcers.
How important is off‑loading?
Critical—without pressure relief, wounds recur. TCC or walker boots, plus proper footwear and insoles, are the backbone of healing.
Can you save my limb if bone infection is present?
Often, yes—with debridement, local and systemic antibiotics, and stabilization/off‑loading. Complex cases may require staged reconstruction.
Do you provide physiotherapy?
We do not provide in‑house physiotherapy. We supply written protocols and coordinate with your physiotherapist; referrals to external clinics are available if needed.
What if revascularization is necessary?
We coordinate fast vascular evaluation. Restoring blood flow (angioplasty/bypass) dramatically improves healing odds before major reconstruction.
Next step

Need Diabetic Foot and Limb Salvage in Delhi?

Book a consultation. We’ll plan infection control, off‑loading, and stabilization so you can heal safely and stay mobile.