
Protecting Mobility Through Early Diabetic Foot Treatment
Diabetic foot wounds are one of the leading causes of lower-extremity amputation in the United States. Left untreated, a small ulcer can progress quickly into a serious, limb-threatening infection. At Valley Podiatry and Wound Care Center, our diabetic foot care and limb salvage program exists to change that outcome for patients throughout Mission, Rio Grande City, Weslaco, and the surrounding Rio Grande Valley.
Dr. Samuel Enyew leads a team that uses early intervention, advanced wound protocols, and personalized treatment plans to help patients avoid complications, preserve their mobility, and stay on their feet.
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How Diabetes Affects the Feet
- Redness, swelling, or warmth in the foot or ankle
- A wound or sore that hasn't healed within a week
- Drainage, odor, or discoloration around a wound
- Numbness, tingling, or loss of sensation
- Changes in the shape or structure of the foot
Our Diabetic Foot Care & Limb Salvage Services
Foot and Leg Ulcer Treatment
- Comprehensive wound assessment and infection control
- Debridement of damaged or non-viable tissue
- Off-loading strategies to relieve pressure from the wound
- Circulation evaluation, with vascular referral when needed
- Ongoing monitoring through the full healing process
Charcot Foot Management
- Early diagnosis through clinical evaluation and imaging
- Immobilization to stabilize the affected foot
- Custom bracing and offloading devices
- Reconstructive treatment for advanced cases
Limb Preservation and Salvage
- Advanced, evidence-based wound care protocols
- Coordination with vascular specialists for circulation issues
- Aggressive infection management
- Surgical intervention when conservative treatment isn't enough
- Long-term monitoring to prevent recurrence
How Diabetes Affects the Feet
Every diabetic foot evaluation at Valley Podiatry and Wound Care Center starts with a conversation. Dr. Enyew will ask about your diabetes history, when you first noticed the wound or symptom, and any changes in sensation, swelling, or healing time, since these details often point to the underlying cause before any testing even begins.
Then he examines the wound, checks for nerve damage and circulation issues, and orders imaging, such as digital X-ray or diagnostic ultrasound, when bone or soft tissue involvement is suspected. If infection is a concern, a wound culture helps pinpoint the cause. By the end of your visit, you'll have a clear picture of what's driving your condition and a treatment plan built specifically around it, not a one-size-fits-all approach.
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