Many diabetic foot patients are left with large and deep wounds after cleaning, so is it possible to treat such wounds by skin or flap grafting? Before that we need to understand the characteristics of diabetic foot ulceration. First of all, it is not simply a problem of localized ulceration and infection, but a manifestation of the abnormal condition of the whole body that occurs locally. In other words, we should not only focus on the wound treatment, but also pay attention to the improvement and treatment of the whole body condition. Let’s learn more about skin implants. In addition to using artificial skin, the best skin implant is your own skin. This involves removing a piece of skin from a healthy area and implanting it into the area that needs skin for the purpose of rapid wound healing and recovery. It is widely used clinically in medical fields such as cosmetic surgery and burns with good results. Then we return to the issue of wound implantation for diabetic patients. Above we talked about that the foot ulceration of diabetic patients is not simply a matter of infection, but also a characteristic that diabetic wounds themselves are difficult to heal. For the treatment of diabetic foot, many doctors who are not very experienced in debridement, throw the infection can not be controlled and continue to develop. This will lead to a situation that although a new skin is implanted, the possibility of being recurrently infected is still high because the infection problem of the wound under the skin is still serious, resulting in the two not being able to combine well and the skin will be necrotic again due to the infection problem. Therefore, the risk of treating diabetic foot ulcers with skin grafting is high, and it is easy to have an old wound that has not healed and a new one, and if the wound is not treated well, infection may occur in both places. You can imagine how much damage is done to the patient. Therefore, this is the main reason why we do not advocate implantation for diabetic foot treatment. The combined Chinese and Western medicine approach treats the trauma in five steps: debridement, anti-infection, improvement of circulation, nourishment of the trauma, and decomposition and muscle growth. In addition to curing the diabetic foot, we also try to minimize the pain of the patient.