A sore on the foot seems like it should be manageable. You clean it, dress it, follow the instructions. Days pass. Weeks pass. The wound is still there, maybe larger than before, and nothing you or your doctor are doing seems to be working.
For patients with peripheral arterial disease or diabetes, a foot ulcer that will not heal is not just a wound care problem. It is a warning sign about blood flow, and in some cases, it is one of the most urgent signals the body sends before serious complications set in.
Understanding the difference between a wound that needs time and a wound that needs a vascular evaluation can determine what options remain available to you.
Wounds heal through a complex biological process that requires blood. Oxygen, nutrients, and the cells responsible for tissue repair all arrive through the bloodstream. When blood flow to the foot is significantly reduced, as it is in advanced peripheral arterial disease, that process stalls.
Standard wound care treatments, dressings, debridement, antibiotics, offloading, address the wound itself. But they cannot substitute for adequate circulation. Without enough blood reaching the tissue, healing simply cannot proceed the way it should.
In patients with diabetes, this problem is often compounded. Diabetic neuropathy means reduced sensation, so wounds can develop and worsen before they are noticed. Elevated blood sugar impairs immune function and slows cell repair. And diabetic vascular disease frequently affects the small vessels of the foot and calf in ways that make surgical correction difficult.
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Any wound on the foot or lower leg in a patient with known PAD or diabetes that has not shown clear improvement after four to six weeks of appropriate wound care warrants urgent vascular evaluation. Do not wait for the wound to become an emergency. |
Non-healing foot ulcers are one of the most common reasons patients with PAD end up in urgent vascular consultations, and one of the most common reasons they end up facing conversations about amputation.
The progression is not always slow. A wound that looks stable can worsen quickly if infection takes hold in tissue that is already poorly perfused. Bacteria spread faster in ischemic tissue. The body's ability to fight infection depends on the same blood flow that is already compromised.
Early vascular evaluation, before a wound becomes infected or the tissue around it begins to die, significantly expands the range of interventions available. That window closes as the disease advances.
If you have a wound on your foot or lower leg that is not improving with standard care, and you have PAD, diabetes, or significant cardiovascular risk factors, a referral to a vascular specialist is not an overreaction. It is the medically appropriate next step, and the sooner it happens, the more options remain on the table.
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At this point, most patients are not looking for another opinion. They are looking for a reason not to give up. If your condition is not responding to current treatment... Some patients in this situation are exploring investigational approaches focused on restoring blood flow at the cellular level. Our guide on When Wound Care Isn't Enough: What a Non-Healing Wound Is Really Telling You explores what the research is showing and who may be a candidate. hemostemix.com/blog/when-wound-care-isnt-enough |
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Disclaimer: This article is educational only and does not constitute medical advice. Individual outcomes vary. Always consult your physician before making any treatment decisions. |