Diabetes may present with clinical signs of foot pain, analyzed as a result of diabetic peripheral neuropathy. In addition to pain in the feet, it can also cause local hyperalgesia and loss of pain and warmth. The pain can be burning, dull, or stabbing, especially at night. In addition to diabetic peripheral neuropathy, lower extremity vasculopathy may also be a cause. It is associated with a persistent increase in blood glucose control that is not particularly good in diabetic patients.
If you are currently experiencing clinical symptoms of foot pain, you should maintain good dietary habits in your daily life, make sure to strictly control your total caloric intake, maintain a good mood, avoid overexertion, wear shoes that are usually loose, and do some exercise appropriately, but not too vigorously to avoid trauma, and actively apply some glucose-lowering medications At the same time, you should actively apply some glucose-lowering medication to treat the condition, keep your blood sugar within the normal range, and have regular blood sugar and glycated hemoglobin checks. The pain in the feet can be treated with pain relieving medications and b vitamins.
If lower extremity vasculopathy is complicated, it can be treated with lipid modifying, antiplatelet, and vasodilating drugs.