Table 2.
Item | Statement | Mean rating |
---|---|---|
A-1 | Identifying visible, chronically exposed trabecular bone visible within a forefoot ulcer is sufficient for establishing the diagnosis of DFO. | 7.77 |
A-2 | MRI and/or bone biopsy are preferred second-line diagnostic modalities to confirm the presence of DFO when X-rays and clinical exam alone are suspicious but not sufficient to diagnose DFO. | 7.93 |
A-3 | Systemic toxicity in the presence of DFO with associated soft tissue infection, represents an absolute indication for surgical resection of bone. | 7.93 |
A-4 | Bone resection is recommended when substantial cortical destruction, osteolysis, macroscopic bone fragmentation (sequestria), or necrotic bone is seen on X-ray. | 7.69 |
A-5 | Débridement/resection of bone is recommended when visible, chronically exposed trabecular bone is identified within a forefoot ulcer. | 7.31 |
A-6 | An open or infected joint space represents an absolute indication for surgical resection of bone. | 7.29 |
A-7 | DFO in patients with prosthetic heart valves represents an absolute indication for surgical resection of bone. | 7.00 |
DFO, diabetic foot osteomyelitis.