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Diabetic Foot Care

Diabetic Foot Care: Protect Your Feet and Your Balance

If you have been diabetic for years, the danger to your feet builds quietly. Numbness, burning, and poor balance are early warnings. Here is how to protect your feet, prevent falls, and what to do now. Reviewed by Dr. V. Raja Sekhar.

Dr V Raja Sekhar, Foot Surgeon and Podiatrist, diabetic foot care specialist at Vivekananda Hospital Begumpet Hyderabad

Written by Vivekananda Hospital Editorial Team  |  Medically reviewed by Dr. V. Raja Sekhar (Foot Surgeon & Podiatrist, 24+ years)

Expert in diabetic foot care, foot ulcers, limb salvage, and foot & ankle surgery, Vivekananda Hospital, Begumpet  |  Last reviewed: 30 June 2026

See a Foot Specialist Urgently If You Notice

Any cut, blister, or sore on the foot that is not healing, redness or swelling, black or discoloured skin, foul smell, pus, or a wound you did not feel happen. In a long-standing diabetic, a small foot wound can turn serious fast. Do not wait. Call +91 7207904418.

Key Takeaways

  • 01 Years of high blood sugar damage the nerves and blood supply in the feet, so a diabetic can injure a foot without feeling any pain.
  • 02 Numbness, burning or tingling feet, difficulty walking, and poor balance are early warning signs of diabetic nerve damage.
  • 03 That same nerve damage weakens balance, which raises the risk of a fall and a fracture. Checking balance early helps prevent serious injury.
  • 04 Daily foot checks, the right footwear, good sugar control, and a yearly foot exam prevent most diabetic foot complications.

Diabetic foot care is the daily routine and medical attention that protects the feet of a person with diabetes from injury, infection, and ulcers. It matters because long-standing diabetes damages the nerves and the blood vessels in the feet. The nerve damage takes away sensation, so a cut or blister goes unnoticed, and the poor blood supply means wounds heal slowly and infect easily. The same nerve damage also weakens balance, which is why many long-standing diabetics fall. Good foot care, checking your feet every day, wearing proper footwear, controlling blood sugar, and getting a yearly foot and balance check, prevents most of these problems.

"The patients who lose a toe or a foot almost never started with a big problem. They started with a small blister or a crack they could not feel. By the time they noticed, infection had set in. The other thing people miss is balance. When the nerves in the feet are damaged, the body loses its sense of the ground, and falls follow. That is why we now check balance, not just the skin. Catch both early and almost every amputation is preventable."

Dr. V. Raja Sekhar, Foot Surgeon & Podiatrist, Vivekananda Hospital Begumpet

India has one of the largest diabetic populations in the world, and diabetic foot complications are a leading cause of lower-limb amputation here. Most of these amputations follow a foot ulcer that began as a minor, painless injury. The encouraging part is that the vast majority are preventable with early checks and simple daily care, which is the entire reason behind the free camp described below.

Why Diabetes Damages the Feet

Three changes happen in the feet of a long-standing diabetic, and together they create the danger.

Nerve damage

High sugar over years damages the nerves, called diabetic neuropathy. The feet go numb, so cuts, blisters, and burns are not felt. Pain is the body's alarm, and diabetes switches it off.

Poor blood supply

Diabetes narrows the blood vessels feeding the feet. Less blood means wounds heal slowly and infections spread, because the body cannot deliver enough oxygen and immune cells to fight them.

Lost balance

The same nerve damage removes the feet's sense of the ground. Without that feedback, balance suffers, walking becomes unsteady, and the risk of a fall and a fracture rises sharply.

Early Warning Signs You Should Not Ignore

If you have been diabetic for several years, watch for these. Any one of them is a reason to get your feet and balance checked.

Walking difficulty

Unsteady, slow, or careful walking, or feeling you might trip.

Burning feet

Burning, tingling, or a pins-and-needles feeling, often worse at night.

Imbalance

Swaying when standing, holding walls for support, or near-falls.

Deformed feet

Changing foot shape, claw toes, or new pressure points and hard skin.

A small balancing problem today can lead to a serious fracture tomorrow. In older diabetics, a hip or leg fracture from a fall can be life-altering. That is why balance is now treated as part of diabetic foot care, not separate from it.

The Link Between Diabetes, Balance, and Falls

Balance depends on your feet telling your brain where the ground is. In a long-standing diabetic, nerve damage cuts that signal, so the body is slower to correct itself when you step on an uneven surface or turn quickly. The result is swaying, unsteadiness, and falls, often at home, often leading to fractures.

Most people never know their balance is slipping until they fall, because the change is gradual. This is exactly why a measured balance check is valuable. Instead of guessing, equipment can quantify how steady you are and flag a problem early, while it can still be improved with exercises, the right footwear, and treatment. Catching weak balance before the first fall is far better than treating a fracture after it.

How to Take Care of Your Feet Every Day

Most diabetic foot problems are prevented by a simple daily routine. None of this is complicated, and it takes a few minutes.

Check your feet daily. Look at the soles, between the toes, and the heels for cuts, blisters, redness, or colour change. Use a mirror or ask family if you cannot see well.
Wash and dry carefully. Wash with lukewarm, not hot, water. Check the temperature with your hand or elbow, since numb feet cannot feel a burn. Dry well between the toes.
Moisturise, but not between the toes. Cream on dry skin prevents cracks. Keep it off the gaps between toes, where dampness causes infection.
Never walk barefoot. Wear soft footwear indoors and outdoors so you do not step on something sharp without feeling it. Check inside shoes before wearing.
Cut nails straight across. Avoid cutting into the corners, which causes ingrown nails and infection. If your vision or reach is poor, get help.
Control your blood sugar. Good long-term sugar control slows the nerve and blood-vessel damage that starts the whole problem. This is the foundation under everything else.
Free Camp  |  Limited Slots

Free Diabetic Balance & Foot Check Camp

Are you a long-standing diabetic? Get your balance and feet checked before a small problem becomes a serious injury. Free quantitative balance testing on advanced equipment, plus expert advice from a foot surgeon.

Date

Saturday, 4 July 2026

Time

9:00 AM to 4:00 PM

Venue

Vivekananda Hospital OPD, Begumpet

What you get free: quantitative balance testing with advanced equipment, a foot screening, and personalised advice from Dr. V. Raja Sekhar, Foot Surgeon & Podiatrist with 24+ years of experience. No referral needed. Free registration.

Reserve Your Free Slot

Call now to book: +91 7207904418 or 040-35261414 / 15

Related Specialists at Vivekananda Hospital

Diabetic foot care often needs a team, because the problem starts with diabetes and reaches the nerves, kidneys, and circulation:

  • Dr. V. Raja Sekhar (Foot Surgeon & Podiatrist), for diabetic foot, ulcers, limb salvage, and foot & ankle surgery. View profile
  • Dr. Ravi Sishir Reddy (MBBS, MD General Medicine), for diabetes control and overall management. View profile
  • Dr. E. Praveen (Nephrology), for diabetic kidney complications that often accompany foot disease. View profile

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the early signs of diabetic foot problems?
The early signs are numbness or loss of feeling in the feet, burning or tingling, difficulty walking, poor balance, dry or cracked skin, changes in foot shape, and any cut or blister that is slow to heal. Because the nerves are damaged, these problems are often painless, so you have to look for them rather than wait to feel them.
Why do diabetics get numbness and tingling in the feet?
Years of high blood sugar damage the small nerves in the feet, a condition called diabetic neuropathy. This causes numbness, tingling, and burning, and it removes the protective sense of pain. The same nerve damage also affects balance, because the feet can no longer tell the brain exactly where the ground is.
How can a diabetic take care of their feet at home?
Check your feet every day for cuts, blisters, and colour changes, wash with lukewarm water and dry between the toes, moisturise dry skin but not between the toes, never walk barefoot, cut toenails straight across, wear well-fitting footwear, and keep your blood sugar under control. Get any non-healing wound seen by a doctor quickly.
How does diabetes affect balance and cause falls?
Balance depends on the feet sending the brain constant information about the ground. Diabetic nerve damage weakens that signal, so the body reacts slowly to uneven surfaces and the person becomes unsteady. This raises the risk of falls, and in older diabetics a fall can cause a serious fracture. A balance check can detect this early, before the first fall.
Can diabetic foot problems be reversed?
Existing nerve damage usually cannot be fully reversed, but its progress can be slowed with good blood sugar control, and most serious complications such as ulcers and amputation are preventable with early care. Wounds caught early often heal well. The goal is to protect the feet and catch problems before they become severe.
When should a diabetic see a foot specialist?
See a foot specialist at once for any non-healing cut, blister, sore, redness, swelling, discoloured skin, or foul smell. Beyond emergencies, every long-standing diabetic should have a foot and balance check at least once a year, even with no symptoms, because the early damage is painless and easy to miss.
What happens at the free diabetic balance and foot check camp?
At the free camp on 4 July 2026 at Vivekananda Hospital, Begumpet, you receive quantitative balance testing on advanced equipment, a foot screening, and personalised advice from Dr. V. Raja Sekhar, Foot Surgeon and Podiatrist. The camp runs from 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM. No referral is needed and registration is free.
Is the camp really free and do I need a referral?
Yes, the balance and foot check camp is free and registration is free. You do not need a referral from another doctor to attend. Slots are limited, so it helps to reserve in advance by calling or sending a WhatsApp message to +91 7207904418.

Protect Your Balance. Prevent a Fall.

If you have been diabetic for years, do not wait for a wound or a fall. Get your feet and balance checked at our free camp, or book a consultation with our foot specialist any day.

Address: Vivekananda Hospital, 6-3-871/A, Greenlands Road, Beside CM Camp Office, Begumpet, Hyderabad 500016

Also serving: Ameerpet, Somajiguda, Punjagutta, Secunderabad, Banjara Hills

About the Medical Reviewer

Dr. V. Raja Sekhar is a Foot Surgeon and Podiatrist at Vivekananda Hospital, Begumpet, Hyderabad, with more than 24 years of experience. He specialises in diabetic foot care, foot ulcers, limb salvage procedures, and foot and ankle surgery.

Medical disclaimer: This article is for general health information and education only. It is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Diabetic foot problems need assessment by a qualified doctor. If you have a non-healing wound or any warning sign, contact your doctor or call +91 7207904418.

References: International Diabetes Federation (IDF) | International Working Group on the Diabetic Foot (IWGDF) | WHO Diabetes fact sheet.

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