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Conditions Treated

Diabetic Foot Ulcer Wound Care in Ohio

Nerve damage, reduced sensation, and circulation changes from diabetes can turn a small foot wound into a serious complication without the right care.

Why diabetic foot ulcers happen

Diabetes can contribute to nerve damage (neuropathy), reduced sensation, circulation problems, pressure points, and higher infection risk. A wound that would normally cause pain can go unnoticed until it has progressed, which is why early evaluation matters.

How PWS approaches diabetic wounds

Our clinicians evaluate the wound, the patient's circulation and neuropathy status, footwear and pressure points, and infection risk. Care typically includes cleansing and dressing selection, offloading coordination, debridement when clinically appropriate, infection monitoring, blood-sugar-aware wound planning, and consistent follow-up. Advanced options, including cellular/tissue-based products, may be considered when standard wound care has not achieved expected progress and the wound meets clinical criteria.

What to watch for

Redness, warmth, swelling, drainage, odor, new pain in a previously numb area, or a wound that is not shrinking after several weeks of appropriate care all warrant evaluation.

Seek emergency care immediately for rapidly spreading infection, fever, confusion, severe pain, black tissue, or any concern for sepsis. Call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room.
Suggested image: clinician performing a wound assessment relevant to diabetic foot ulcers (filename: condition-diabetic-foot-ulcers.jpg)
Educational information. This information does not replace medical evaluation. Wounds that are worsening, painful, infected, or not healing should be evaluated by a qualified healthcare provider.

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