Role of Indicator Test (Neuropad) in Detecting Diabetic Neuropathy
- Conditions
- Diabetic Neuropathy
- Registration Number
- NCT00895440
- Lead Sponsor
- Tameside Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
- Brief Summary
Diabetes mellitus can result in damage to the nerves supplying the feet. Various tests can be used to assess nerve damage but no tests so far have been used to assess loss of sweating which can lead to dry skin, fissuring and ulceration. The indicator test (Neuropad) is a plaster which is applied to the sole of the feet just below the 1st and 2nd toes of both feet. If the color of the plaster changes to pink it indicates that there is no nerve damage to the nerves. However if the plaster retains the blue color or the color only partially changes to pink after 600 seconds then this is a positive test and the patient has nerve damage.
- Detailed Description
With increasing nervous dysfunction, the function of the sweat glands in the feet also diminishes and can cease completely. As a result the skin becomes brittle and dry, making it more susceptible to fissuring and breakdown leading to foot ulceration. This is where the diagnosis using the Neuropad plaster might be useful. The Neuropad measures sweat production and have been proposed as a new test of neuropathy (8,9). The Neuropad examines the function of the sweat glands by means of a colour indicator. The indicator test enables the diagnosis of neuropathy in a substantial proportion of patients with normal clinical examination (10).
This colour indicator, a cobalt-II-salt, is applied in the form of a plaster to the area of skin on the patient's foot to be examined. In healthy subjects, the moisture (sweat) on the foot changes the colour of the Neuropad plaster from blue to pink normally within minutes. However, if the colour does not change completely or very slowly, this indicates initial nerve damage. This test is, as yet, the only one that examines changes in moistness of the foot. The speed and scale of the colour change of the Neuropad plaster can then be assessed as indicators of sudomotor function and thus as indicators of diabetic neuropathy as well. Although the test has been done in patients with diabetic neuropathy it has not been used as a discriminator in painless and painful neuropathy, or in patients with Charcot neuroarthropathy.
In this study we aim to assess the presence of sudomotor dysfunction in patients with painful and painless neuropathy and patients with Charcot foot.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 139
- Type 1 or type 2 diabetes
- Age 18-70 years
- Presence of painless neuropathy
- Presence of painful neuropathy
- Presence of Charcot foot
- Patients with allergy to any metal
- Peripheral vascular disease (defined as the absence of two or more foot pulses and an ankle brachial index of < 0.8)
- Renal failure (serum creatinine > 130 micromol/l)
- Foot ulceration or cellulitis or osteomyelitis
- Patients taking drugs that affect sweating (corticosteroids, antihistamines, psychoactive drugs)
- Chronic alcohol abuse
- B12 deficiency (presence of anaemia, raised mean corpuscular volume, past history of abnormal B12 levels, treatment with B12)
- Patients with any skin conditions affecting their feet(neurodermatitis, psoriasis, scleroderma, Raynaud syndrome, hyperhydrosis, acrocyanosis)
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Identify patients with peripheral neuropathy with the Neuropad indicator test 6 months
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Tameside General Hospital
🇬🇧Ashton-under-Lyne, Lancashire, United Kingdom