Diabetic Foot Complications: What Happens When Blood Flow to Your Legs Is Blocked

Introduction

For a person with diabetes, a small cut or blister on the foot is not a minor inconvenience. It can be the beginning of a cascade that leads to infection, tissue death, and amputation.

The root cause is not the wound itself. It is the loss of blood flow to the legs that diabetes silently causes over time. When arteries supplying the feet narrow and block, even a tiny injury cannot heal. Understanding this process is critical for every diabetic patient and their family.


Why Diabetes Damages the Blood Vessels in Your Legs

Chronically elevated blood sugar causes peripheral arterial disease (PAD): progressive arterial narrowing from plaque buildup. People with diabetes develop PAD earlier and more extensively than others. The arteries below the knee supplying the foot are most affected. Combined with diabetic neuropathy, which reduces pain sensation, injuries often go unnoticed until already serious.


What Is a Diabetic Foot Ulcer?

A diabetic foot ulcer is an open wound on the foot that fails to heal within four to six weeks. Neuropathy prevents the patient from feeling injury, poor circulation prevents healing, and high blood sugar impairs immunity.

Globally, a lower limb is amputated every 20 seconds as a result of diabetes (IDF). In India, where diabetes affects over 100 million people, the burden is enormous.


Warning Signs You Should Never Ignore

Inspect your feet daily if you have diabetes. Seek urgent medical attention for: a wound present more than two weeks without improvement, redness or swelling around a wound, foul-smelling discharge, blackening of the toes or foot, leg pain at rest, or one foot that feels cold, numb, or looks pale or blue.

These signs indicate compromised blood flow or active infection requiring immediate vascular assessment.


Why Diabetic Foot Wounds Refuse to Heal

Wound healing needs blood flow, functioning immunity, and intact nerve signals. Diabetes compromises all three. When arterial blockages make tissue ischaemic, the cellular processes needed for healing stop functioning. Dressings and antibiotics cannot work if the blood supply has not been restored first.


From Wound to Gangrene: Understanding the Risk

Without restored blood flow, a diabetic foot ulcer can progress to gangrene. Dry gangrene causes tissue to blacken and die. Wet gangrene involves bacterial infection and is a surgical emergency. Both can spread rapidly and become life-threatening if not treated urgently. Timely vascular intervention can save the limb.


How Vascular Specialists Treat Diabetic Foot Complications

The treatment goal is to restore blood flow to ischaemic tissue.

Peripheral angioplasty and stenting uses a balloon catheter to open the blocked artery. A stent may maintain the opening. Performed under local anaesthesia with image guidance, no large incisions are needed.

Subintimal angioplasty creates a new channel within a completely occluded artery to restore flow.

Atherectomy removes plaque from the artery wall using a catheter-based device.

All procedures at Jaju IR Clinic are performed under real-time fluoroscopy and angiography guidance.


Can Amputation Be Avoided?

In many cases, yes. Early vascular evaluation before tissue damage becomes irreversible is the key. Endovascular revascularisation significantly reduces major amputation rates in critical limb ischaemia when patients are referred promptly. If amputation has been recommended, a second opinion from a vascular specialist is always appropriate.


Book a Consultation at Jaju IR Clinic, Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar

A non-healing wound is a vascular emergency. Do not wait.

Dr. Vivek Vijaykumar Jaju (MBBS, MD, FVIR — Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai) specialises in peripheral angioplasty, limb salvage, and minimally invasive treatment for leg wounds, ulcers, and early gangrene.

Jaju Clinic | Opp. HDFC Bank, Sutgirni to Shivaji Nagar Road, Near Petrol Pump, Garkheda, Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar 431009

Call +91 8446060237 or email ir.dept_jajuclinic@zohomail.in to book your appointment.


Conclusion

A diabetic foot wound that will not heal signals that blood flow has been compromised. Dressings and antibiotics alone cannot resolve an ischaemic wound. Vascular assessment and timely restoration of blood flow are the most important steps a diabetic patient can take.

Expert leg wound and ulcer treatment in Aurangabad is available at Jaju IR Clinic. Do not allow a treatable condition to progress to amputation.


FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (FAQs)

Diabetes causes narrowing of the arteries in the legs (peripheral arterial disease) and nerve damage (neuropathy). Reduced blood flow means the wound cannot receive the oxygen and nutrients needed to heal. Impaired immunity from high blood sugar also increases infection risk.

Any wound that has not shown clear improvement within two weeks should be evaluated. Redness, swelling, discharge, blackening of skin, or pain at rest in the legs are signs requiring immediate attention.

Yes, if blood flow is not restored. However, minimally invasive vascular procedures such as angioplasty can often restore circulation and allow the wound to heal, preventing amputation in many cases.

Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) is the narrowing of the arteries supplying the legs due to plaque buildup. It is significantly more common and severe in people with diabetes. It reduces blood flow to the feet, causing wounds that cannot heal and pain at rest.

Minimally invasive endovascular procedures such as balloon angioplasty, stenting, and atherectomy are used to open blocked leg arteries. These are catheter-based procedures performed under local anaesthesia with image guidance, with no major incisions.

Critical limb ischaemia is the most severe form of peripheral arterial disease, where blood flow to the leg is so reduced that the tissue is at immediate risk of death. It typically presents with rest pain, non-healing wounds, or gangrene. Urgent vascular evaluation is required.

In early stages, yes. Restoring blood flow through endovascular procedures combined with wound debridement and infection management can treat gangrene and save the limb. The earlier treatment begins, the greater the chance of limb preservation.

Daily foot inspection, well-fitted footwear, strict blood sugar control, regular check-ups with a vascular specialist, and not smoking are the most important preventive steps. Any wound should be assessed promptly.

Q9: Is diabetic foot treatment painful? Minimally invasive vascular procedures are performed under local anaesthesia. Most patients experience mild discomfort during the procedure and soreness afterward, which is managed with standard pain relief.

Dr. Vivek Vijaykumar Jaju at Jaju IR Clinic, Garkheda, Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar, offers specialist vascular assessment and minimally invasive treatment for diabetic foot wounds, non-healing ulcers, and early-stage gangrene.

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