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Variability in the clinical diagnosis of diabetic peripheral neuropathy

Authors :
Manuel Coheña-Jiménez
Esther Chicharro-Luna
Francisco José Pomares-Gómez
Ana Belen Ortega-Avila
Gabriel Gijon-Nogueron
Source :
Primary care diabetes. 14(1)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Aims The aims of this study are to assess the variability in the prevalence of diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN), according to the diagnostic and clinical guidelines used. Methods A cross-sectional observational study was conducted of 111 patients with diabetes mellitus. The presence/absence of DPN was determined according to 12 different criteria stipulated in various clinical guidelines (ADA 2018, IWGDF 2016, IDF 2012 and CONUEI 2018). The Cohen’s kappa coefficient (κ) was performed to determine the degree of agreement for DPN diagnosis among the different criteria. Results The recorded prevalence of DPN ranged from 13.1% (criterion ADA 2018) to 68.5% (criterion IDF 2012). The sensory parameter that was most commonly affected was the non-perception of vibration (68.5%) and the absence of Achilles reflexes (59.4%). IWGDF, based on the use of a monofilament, cotton wisp and tuning fork, was the test with more agreements, presenting good agreement with 2 criteria from ADA 2018 (k = 0.845), 1b2 (k = 0.817), 2 criteria from IWGDF 2016 (k = 0.933), (k = 0.817), 1 criteria from IDF 2012 (k = 0.845) and 1 criteria from CONUEI 2018 (k = 0.860), all p Conclusion The IWGDF criterion based on the use of a monofilament, cotton wisp and tuning fork for the diagnosis presented the highest level of concordance with the other criteria (>0.8).

Details

ISSN :
18780210
Volume :
14
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Primary care diabetes
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cca1bd28aa0e2d8d71cab6f9eeb9d2cf