A new surgical technique for ray amputation of the diabetic foot is described. The procedure provides soft tissue reconstruction using a local flap in combination with negative pressure wound therapy to close these wounds safely and effectively. This article reports on 12 patients treated with this technique in a Tertiary Hospital/General Hospital in Singapore and compares their outcomes to those of 12 comparative cases from neighbouring institutions under the same health group who received conventional dressings. The new technique led to a higher number of healed wounds (12 vs. 4) and a shorter median time to healing (46.5 vs. 196.5 days). No major amputation or further minor amputation of the target limb occurred in the group treated with the new technique, whereas one major amputation and two further minor amputations took place in the comparison group. Our results suggest that the new technique is promising in this diabetic population with concurrent comorbidities.
Patients with combat wounds and injuries, presented as extensive infected and purulent defects with antibiotic-resistant microflora, were treated in a surgical inpatient setting. Closure of extensive soft tissue defects of the limbs is possible using methods of plastic and reconstructive surgery and requires preoperative infection control. The lack of effect from preoperative treatment for purulent limb defects with antibiotic-resistant microflora leads to limb amputation. This clinical study proposes a method of treatment by hyperbaric oxygenation with an ozone-containing steam–water mixture as an anti-bacterial agent. Eighteen male patients, aged between 20 and 60 years, were categorised into three groups based on the time elapsed since the injury. All patients were treated using the proposed method. The high effectiveness of the proposed method was demonstrated in all groups and resulted in saving limbs from amputation, establishing suitable conditions for closing the soft tissue defects of the limbs and achieving significant progress in the recovery.