Lesson 1Focused history elements: hyperglycemia, duration of ulcer, prior ulcers or amputations, systemic symptomsLearners will identify key history elements for suspected diabetic foot infection, including ulcer onset, prior wounds or amputations, systemic symptoms, glycemic control, and recent antibiotics, to estimate severity and guide urgent investigations in hospital.
Characterizing ulcer onset and durationPrior ulcers, amputations, and surgeriesRecent trauma, footwear, and pressure historySystemic symptoms and sepsis red flagsMedication, antibiotic, and allergy reviewLesson 2Initial in-hospital management in first 24 hours: empiric antibiotics, culture technique, offloading strategies, dressing choices, glycemic control coordinationLearners will structure the first 24 hours of in-hospital care, covering empiric antibiotic selection, proper culture techniques, urgent offloading, dressing choices, pain control, and coordination of glycemic management with the inpatient team in Canada.
Risk-based empiric antibiotic selectionObtaining deep tissue and bone culturesImmediate offloading and bed rest ordersSelecting initial dressings and topical careCoordinating insulin and glycemic controlLesson 3Laboratory and imaging: CBC, CRP, blood cultures, HbA1c, plain radiographs, MRI indications and useThis section explains appropriate laboratory and imaging workup, including CBC, CRP, ESR, blood cultures, HbA1c, plain radiographs, and indications for MRI, CT, or ultrasound to detect osteomyelitis, abscess, and gas in soft tissues in hospitals.
Baseline inflammatory and sepsis labsRole of HbA1c and metabolic markersPlain radiographs and typical findingsMRI indications for osteomyelitisWhen to use CT or ultrasound imagingLesson 4Pathophysiology of diabetic foot infection and neuropathic ulcerationThis section reviews the mechanisms leading to neuropathic ulceration and infection in diabetes, linking hyperglycemia, neuropathy, ischemia, and impaired immunity to clinical patterns that guide risk stratification and treatment decisions in podiatry.
Impact of chronic hyperglycemia on tissuesPeripheral neuropathy and loss of protectionMicrovascular and macrovascular ischemiaImmune dysfunction and infection riskBiofilm formation in chronic foot woundsLesson 5Coordination with endocrinology, infectious disease, vascular surgery, and wound care teamsLearners will understand how to coordinate care with endocrinology, infectious disease, vascular surgery, and wound care teams, defining roles, referral triggers, and communication strategies to optimize outcomes and reduce complications in Canadian hospitals.
When to involve endocrinology servicesConsulting infectious disease specialistsReferral criteria for vascular surgeryWorking with wound care and podiatryStructured multidisciplinary case reviewsLesson 6Focused foot and lower-limb exam: probe-to-bone, depth, sinus tracts, neuropathy testing (10g monofilament), peripheral pulsesThis section details a structured foot and lower-limb exam, including inspection, palpation, probe-to-bone testing, depth and sinus tract assessment, neuropathy screening with 10 g monofilament, and vascular evaluation with pedal pulses in clinical practice.
Systematic visual inspection of the footProbe-to-bone technique and interpretationMeasuring wound depth and sinus tracts10 g monofilament neuropathy testingPalpation and grading of pedal pulsesLesson 7Discharge planning: outpatient wound care, offloading devices, footwear prescription, glycemic follow-upLearners will plan safe discharge for patients with diabetic foot infection, including outpatient wound care arrangements, offloading devices, footwear prescriptions, glycemic follow-up, education on warning signs, and criteria for early return in Canada.
Assessing readiness and safety for dischargeCoordinating outpatient wound care visitsPrescribing offloading devices and footwearScheduling diabetes and glycemic follow-upPatient education on recurrence preventionLesson 8Wound classification systems and severity scoring (IDSA, IWGDF, University of Texas)Learners will compare major wound classification and severity scoring systems, including IDSA, IWGDF, and University of Texas, and apply them to stratify risk, standardize documentation, and guide level of care and treatment intensity in hospitals.
IDSA infection severity categoriesIWGDF risk and infection gradingUniversity of Texas wound stagingLinking scores to treatment pathwaysUsing scores for communication and auditLesson 9Criteria and timing for surgical debridement or amputation and perioperative considerationsThis section outlines criteria and timing for surgical debridement or amputation, including indications, urgency levels, perioperative optimization, anesthesia considerations, and postoperative limb salvage and rehabilitation planning in podiatry care.
Indications for urgent surgical debridementCriteria for limited versus major amputationPreoperative risk assessment and optimizationAntibiotic timing around the operationPostoperative wound and limb salvage plansLesson 10Wound care protocols, antimicrobial stewardship, serial assessment and documentationThis section presents standardized wound care protocols, dressing selection, debridement intervals, antimicrobial stewardship principles, and methods for serial assessment, photography, and documentation to monitor healing and guide changes in hospital settings.
Standardized bedside wound assessmentChoosing dressings by exudate and depthFrequency and methods of debridementAntibiotic de-escalation and durationSerial photography and EMR documentation