Initial Assessment of Diabetic Foot Ulcer with Intact Distal Pulses
Plain radiographs (X-rays) are the most appropriate initial imaging modality for this patient, not duplex ultrasound, conventional angiography, MRA, or CT with contrast. 1, 2
Immediate Diagnostic Priority: Plain Radiography
Obtain weight-bearing plain radiographs in two views immediately to evaluate for osteomyelitis (detectable in 50-70% of cases when present), soft tissue gas, foreign bodies, bone architecture changes, and Charcot foot deformities. 1, 2 This is the essential baseline imaging for all diabetic foot complications with suspected infection and must be performed before considering any advanced vascular imaging. 1
The location of the ulcer should be marked with a radio-opaque marker to allow accurate assessment of structures adjacent to the ulcer. 3
Critical Bedside Vascular Assessment (Despite Intact Pulses)
Do not assume adequate perfusion based solely on palpable pulses—formal objective vascular testing is mandatory because up to 50% of diabetic foot ulcers have concomitant peripheral arterial disease (PAD), which dramatically increases amputation risk. 1, 2, 4
Perform the following bedside assessments:
- Handheld Doppler evaluation of dorsalis pedis and posterior tibial arteries to assess waveform quality (triphasic waveforms largely exclude PAD). 3, 2
- Ankle-brachial index (ABI) measurement: ABI <0.9 confirms PAD; ABI <0.5 indicates severe ischemia requiring urgent vascular imaging. 3, 2
- Toe-brachial index if diagnostic uncertainty exists (≥0.75 largely excludes PAD). 3, 2
When Advanced Vascular Imaging Is Actually Indicated
Duplex ultrasound, MRA, CT angiography, or conventional angiography are NOT first-line diagnostic tools for initial assessment of diabetic foot infection. 2 These modalities are reserved for specific indications when revascularization is being considered:
- Toe pressure <30 mmHg or TcPO₂ <25 mmHg (urgent vascular imaging indicated). 3, 2
- Ankle pressure <50 mmHg or ABI <0.5 (urgent vascular imaging indicated). 3, 2
- Ulcer fails to improve within 6 weeks despite optimal management. 3
When vascular imaging is needed, any of the four modalities (duplex ultrasound, CT angiography, MRA, or conventional angiography) can be used, with the entire lower extremity arterial circulation evaluated and detailed visualization of below-the-knee and pedal arteries required. 3
Additional Critical Assessment Components
Perform probe-to-bone test with a sterile blunt metal probe—a positive test in an infected wound makes osteomyelitis highly probable. 1, 2 If the probe-to-bone test is positive but plain radiographs are negative, MRI should be obtained to assess extent of bone involvement and detect purulent collections. 3, 1
Assess infection severity by measuring extent of erythema, checking for systemic signs (fever, tachycardia, hypotension), and obtaining inflammatory markers (WBC, CRP, ESR). 1, 2
Common Pitfalls to Avoid
- Never delay plain radiographs to pursue advanced vascular imaging first—X-rays provide essential baseline information about bone involvement and architecture. 2
- Never attribute poor wound healing to "diabetic microangiopathy" without excluding macrovascular PAD through proper objective testing. 3, 2
- Never assume duplex ultrasound is the initial assessment tool—it has specific indications for identifying arterial stenosis location and severity when revascularization is being considered, not for initial infection assessment. 2