What is an Amputation Prevention Center®?
An Amputation Prevention Center is a surgically focused inpatient and outpatient
program within a Comprehensive Wound Healing Center, that specializes
in treating patients with limb-threatening conditions, such as diabetic
foot ulcers/infections and peripheral arterial disease.
Diabetic foot complications are among the most complex to treat and require
a coordinated, organized approach from a team of specialists with advanced
training. The good news is up to 85% of amputations due to diabetic complications
are preventable with an integrated approach to treatment.
When Should I Call the Amputation Prevention Center?
Time is of the essence when trying to save your limb. Any time you have
a sore or wound on your lower extremity that concerns you, talk to your
physician or contact our Amputation Prevention Center at Torrance Memorial
for an evaluation.
Call us at 310-517-4736 for an appointment right away if you experience
any of the following symptoms:
- A foot or leg ulcer that is red and/or swollen
- An ulcer or skin surrounding an ulcer that has turned black
- A leg or foot ulcer and you have had a previous major or minor lower limb
amputation
- You have been told you might need an amputation or a toe, foot, or lower leg.
If you have any of the above symptoms and develop a fever or flu-like symptoms,
you should go to the emergency room and then contact the Amputation Prevention
Center for a follow-up appointment.
How Does a Chronic Wound Lead to Amputation?
Often complicated by underlying conditions, what seems like a simple wound
on your foot or lower leg can turn into a significant problem. Lower extremity
amputation is an unfortunate and often avoidable complication of diabetes.
In fact, the majority of lower limb amputations are due to foot ulcers
that are a result of complications from diabetes, including:
- Neuropathy - loss of feeling in your feet
- Poor circulation
- Charcot foot - a deformity that forms in some patients with diabetes
- Gangrene
- Infections
- Repetitive trauma - from ill-fitting shoes that cause redness, blisters
and evenutally sores
Ulcers develop in up to 25% of those with diabetes over their lifetime.
The longer an ulcer remains open and unhealed, the more likely it is to
become infected. Foot ulcers complicated by infection are often what leads
to an amputation.
Our Amputation Prevention Center Care Specialists
The Amputation Prevention Center is led by a team consisting of surgical
podiatrists and endovascular specialists (vascular surgery, interventional
radiology, and/or interventional cardiology) with advanced training in
procedures to save patients from major amputations.
This specialized team allows for rapid vascular and podiatric opinions
regarding the aggressive treatment of infections, response to emergencies,
and performance of urgent investigations and woud debridement.
Click here to meet our Amputation Prevention Team.