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In healthy people, but especially in people with diabetes, dry and cracked skin areas on the feet can occur. It is believed that the appearance of dry skin results from a deterioration in the barrier function due to (neuro-) physiological or neuropathic changes in the skin. The standard treatment for skin dryness mainly consists of appropriate care with moisturizing cleaning and care products to protect and restore the barrier function of the skin. Care products containing urea are often used here because urea reduces the feeling of dry and cracked skin due to its moisturizing, keratoplastic, bacteriostatic, antifungal, itch-relieving and proteolytic properties. However, urea-containing preparations can cause painful skin irritation and burning pain on cracked, injured or extremely inflamed skin. Comparable care effects with better tolerance were postulated for care creams enriched with L-arginine. Therefore, a newly developed cream containing 4% L-arginine for the care of dry and cracked skin should be tested in comparison to a conventional care cream containing 5% urea.
Full description
Since the participants are recruited during a routine visit to the outpatient clinic or the study center of the West German Diabetes and Health Center (WDGZ), no visits to the study center are necessary as part of the study.
recruitment
Study phase (6 weeks) Participants cream their feet with the study creams twice a day (morning and evening) over a period of six weeks. Since there is no contact with medical study staff during this time, undesirable study effects on the behavior of the participants remain minimal.
The use of other creams or care products (except for cleaning) on the feet is not permitted during the study phase.
Questionnaires Foot care questionnaires are completed after two, four, and six weeks and sent to the study center.
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Interventional model
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100 participants in 2 patient groups
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Kerstin Kempf, PhD; Stephan Martin, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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