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The Foot Savior

by Philip Yancey

| 15 Comments

This weekend I am speaking at the dedication of a research center on the campus of Barry University named in honor of Drs. Paul and Margaret Brand.  I wrote three books with Paul Brand in the 1980s (Fearfully and Wonderfully Made, In His Image, and The Gift of Pain) and no one has influenced me more.  Paul Brand died in 2003 but Margaret, now in her nineties, spryly carries on an active life of violin-playing, lecturing, and great-grandmothering.

For a time Dr. Paul Brand was the only orthopedic surgeon working with 12 million leprosy patients in the world.  Christian history includes episodes that rightly cause shame and embarrassment, but the treatment of leprosy makes a very proud balancing chapter.  In the Middle Ages, as leprosy ravaged Europe, an odd rumor spread that Jesus must have had the disease, due to the prophetic description in Isaiah 52-53 of a Servant “disfigured beyond that of any man.”  Leprosy became known as the Holy Disease, and Christians in Europe sought out sufferers as representatives of Jesus, who had said in Matthew 25, “whatever you do for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you do for me.”

The devout, defying society’s stigma as well as their own fears, looked past the unsightly symptoms of leprosy and began treating its victims as they would treat Jesus.  Orders of nuns devoted to Lazarus (the beggar in Jesus’ parable who became the patron saint of leprosy) established homes for patients—2000 such homes in France alone.  These courageous women could do little but bind wounds and change dressings, but the homes themselves, called lazarettos, may have helped break the hold of the disease in Europe, by isolating leprosy patients and improving their living conditions.  In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, Christian missionaries who spread across the globe established many colonies for leprosy patients, and as a result many of the major advances in understanding and treating leprosy came from missionaries.

As I have recounted in my books with Dr. Brand, his research in India led to the discovery that leprosy was not a flesh-eating disease, as long thought, but rather a disease of the nerves.  Virtually all the damage that occurred came about because of painlessness.  Leprosy patients literally destroyed themselves because they lacked the warning system of pain.  Such ordinary acts as wearing tight shoes or using splintered tools can cause permanent damage to someone unaware of damage to tissue.  Dr. Margaret Brand learned of a common way in which painlessness can lead to blindness: once the tiny pain sensor that causes a healthy eye to blink is silenced, the eye dries out.

Later, in the U.S., quite by accident Dr. Paul Brand stumbled across a new practical application for what he had learned about pain.  Although only a few thousand leprosy patients live in the United States, more than ten million diabetics live here, and his team found that his discoveries about pain had direct relevance to diabetics as well.  Dr. Brand tells the story as condensed from The Gift of Pain:

Late one evening as I was scanning a medical journal I noticed the phrase “diabetic osteopathy.”  It struck me as odd: since when did diabetes, a disease of glucose metabolism, affect bones?  Turning the page, I saw X-ray reproductions which looked exactly like X-rays of the bone changes in the feet of my insensitive leprosy patients.  I wrote the authors, two doctors in Texas, who graciously invited me to visit them and discuss the topic.

A few months later I found myself in their Houston offices involved in a good-natured contest of “dueling X-rays.” They would place an X-ray of deteriorating bone on a light table, and I would rummage around in my briefcase until I found a matching X-ray of bone absorption in a leprosy patient.  We compared X-rays of all the bones of the foot, and almost without exception I could duplicate each osteopathic problem they presented.  The demonstration made a great impression on the doctors and interns assembled, for most of them had no experience with leprosy patients and thought they had described a syndrome peculiar to diabetes.

Next, the Texas doctors invited me to speak to the Southern Sugar Club [I love this name!], a genteel group of diabetes specialists from Southern states.  I addressed the subject of feet, challenging their assumption that the common problem with diabetic feet (ulceration so severe that it frequently leads to amputation) was caused primarily by diabetes itself.  My own observations had convinced me that the wounds were, like those of leprosy, caused by the loss of pain sensation.

In a vicious cycle, nerves die off because of diabetes, the patients injure themselves because of the lack of pain, and the resulting wounds do not easily heal because the patient continues to walk on them.  I recounted for the Sugar Club our long history of tracking similar injuries among leprosy patients in India.  “I have examined the X-rays of diabetics,” I told them, “and frankly I think most of the foot injuries you see are preventable.  They’re caused by mechanical stress that goes unnoticed because the patient has lost pain sensation.  Walking on wounded feet drives the infection deeper so that it involves the bones and joints, and with continued walking the bones get absorbed and the joints dislocate.”

I was astonished to learn that diabetics were undergoing 100,000 amputations each year, accounting for half of all amputations in the U.S.  A patient over sixty-five had nearly a one in ten chance of foot amputation.  If our theories were correct, tens of thousands of people were losing their limbs needlessly.  But how could I, with a background in the rather obscure field of leprosy, get the attention of experts in another specialty?

A physician in Atlanta, Georgia, provided the solution.  Dr. John Davidson, a renowned expert on diabetes, had attended the Southern Sugar Club, and I remember well our conversation after my speech.  “Dr. Brand, I run the diabetic clinic at Grady Hospital, a charity hospital that treats over 10,000 diabetics a year,” he said.  “I must tell you, I’m skeptical about what you say.  I haven’t seen nearly the number of foot injuries you say I should.  And I doubt seriously whether the damage that I do see results from the loss of pain.  But I want to be open-minded and so I’ll check out your theories.”

Back at his clinic in Atlanta, Davidson hired a podiatrist and instituted a simple rule: all patients had to take off their shoes and socks each time they came for a diabetic checkup.  The podiatrist examined every foot, even if the patient had no complaints about feet.  A few months later, Davidson called me, and this time I heard enthusiasm, not skepticism, in his voice.  “You won’t believe what I found out,” he began.  “I discovered that 150 of our patients had amputations last year, most of which we didn’t even know about!”

“It works like this,” he explained.  “They come into my office for a routine checkup, walking on an ulcer, and don’t bother to mention it.  Patients see me for regulation of insulin, urine tests, weight monitoring and the like.  When they get a foot injury, they visit a surgeon instead.  The problem is, most of these patients don’t report ulcers or ingrown toenails in the early stages because they don’t feel any pain.  By the time they visit the surgeon, the foot sore is in bad shape.  And that accounts for all the amputations.  The surgeon checks their charts, finds out they’re diabetic, and says, ‘Oh, we’d better amputate right away, or that leg will grow gangrenous.’  All this time, I don’t even know my patient has a foot problem!  The next time I see them for a checkup, they’re walking on an artificial leg, and don’t bother to mention that either.”

With a podiatrist now on staff, Davidson’s clinic was able to interrupt the sequence.  Detecting foot problems at an earlier stage, he could treat the sores and prevent serious infection from setting in.  By the simple measure of requiring patients to take off their shoes and socks for a visual inspection, the clinic soon managed to cut its patients’ amputation rate in half.

We also found that sores on diabetic feet, like those on leprosy feet, are preventable.  Soaking the feet daily in a basin of water and using moisturizing cream does much to inhibit deep keratin cracks in the skin.  And when we outfit diabetics in specialty footwear and teach them proper foot care, the ulcers tend not to recur.  For a time the government considered issuing free shoes to needy diabetics, but, like other proposals that focus on prevention and not cure, that project never got approved.  As a rule, I have found it is easier in the United States to obtain good artificial limbs than good shoes.

Former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop told me that as a result of Dr. Brand’s research into pain, some 50,000 amputations per year may be prevented in the United States alone.  That statistic takes on personal significance to me, for I have an uncle who lost a foot to diabetes and another who lost a leg below the knee.  And now a podiatric school in Miami is dedicating a multi-million dollar facility to further the research program begun by the Brands in a leprosarium in India.  Early on April 29, 2011, more than a billion people will tune in to watch a lavish royal wedding in London.  Later that same day a much smaller crowd will gather to honor two humble missionary doctors who worked with some of the most neglected people on the planet, yet whose work led to treatments that have improved the lives of millions.  The legacy of two great missionary doctors lives on.


Discussion

  1. adeline ong Avatar
    adeline ong

    This is not in relation to what you blogged, Mr Yancy.

    This is a super-duper belated THANK YOU ‘card’ to say HEAPS OF THANKS for doing these stuff exactly 1year 1week ago when you were in Singapore:

    Remember the telephone call you made to an ardent fan of yours who was in hospital? Remember leaving a voice mail in my mobile phone as I missed your call?

    [You even left a voice mail on my close friend’s mobile phone, which I replayed and replayed to hear your voice and message that you left me. Thank you so very much. Your message boosted my morale while I was trying not to lament being in hospital…again.]

    Remember the email I wrote you to invite you to visit me at home as I was hooked to an o2 machine at home?

    I so barely wanted to meet you in person (and I still do)
    & so badly wanted to learn more about writing from you but I couldn’t attend the writing seminar by you because first of all the venue was not wheelchair friendly & second, I ended up in hospital for the entire first 3weeks of May 2010.

    For the past 1year 1 week, it has been on my mind to send you a THANK YOU email or e-card, and I am indeed horrible as I procrastinated for more than a year. On those days when I am well–half of the time I am not well–I ended up doing other things; and also when I am well, my computer became “sick” for weeks; and then there were just weeks when I am just not well to sit at the computer to even bother reading my personal emails.

    Mr Yancy (don’t know whether I should just call you Philip or Mr Yancy because you used both in the messages you left me on the mobile phones), thank you so very much for bothering back then in Singapore in May 2010 to call me up despite your very tight schedule.

    I truly appreciate it very much.

    just sincerely yours,
    adeline

    ps: Regarding WHAT GOOD IS GOD?, I can truly identify with the things you wrote about and experienced. I wish you will write about this that has been bugging me: Why do Christians find it such a taboo to talk about death & about preparations for death?
    We are all heading for Heaven to be with God, with Christ, and yet, Christians just don’t want to talk about death, about pain, about any thing related to death, to one’s departure. I do want to expand more here in a proper email but since there is no way to do so, I am using your blog. So sorry about this. THANK YOU for your patience and your time.

  2. Jeanette Shackelford Avatar
    Jeanette Shackelford

    Dear Mr. Yancey, I have read and re read most of your books and the books of Dr. Brand. I am a Bible teacher of all ages at different times and I am constantly going back to In His Image. I read the Granny Brand book and had a couple of my grandkids to read it. I feel in love with her. I enjoyed the stories about your families and the homespun lessons that were learned. I’m anxious to learn more about you as a person. I liked Why Bother a lot. Thank you for your love for God and his people.

  3. Julia Avatar
    Julia

    Hi Philip…I enjoy all your books very much, I read and re-read them all the time. Paul & Margaret Brand have been a blessing to so many people in need!
    Reading all the comments posted in your blog, I can see that there are many others who feel the same way I do – you write as if you are speaking to friends and your work is an incredible inspiration. How much you have helped me in my faith is difficult to put into words.
    From some of the things you have written, I think your wife Janet is pretty special too!
    I especially think of the time when I read that you & Janet were in an area where you met a woman whose face was so very disfigured, and yet Janet, without even thinking gave her a hug. I think it is great when you include some things about Janet and the work she is involved in. I am thankful for both of you!

  4. Nilanjana Bairagi Avatar
    Nilanjana Bairagi

    I am really touched by the books written by Dr. Paul Brand & you. Very powerful. I am going to share and give a presentation about Dr. Paul Brand tomorrow in my sunday school.

    I am working in the area of design and recently in the area of functional footwear and I never knew that there was a connection between the effects of these two diseases ( Diabetes & leprosy).

    Thank you & God bless!

  5. Philip Yancey Avatar
    Philip Yancey

    Much of the research on materials was done at Karigiri, associated with CMC Vellore. Perhaps you could connect with some of the researchers there? Dr. Brand did much more at the leprosarium in Carville, Louisiana, though that facility has changed and I don’t know who controls the records. Keep up your good work!

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15 thoughts on “The Foot Savior”

  1. This is not in relation to what you blogged, Mr Yancy.

    This is a super-duper belated THANK YOU ‘card’ to say HEAPS OF THANKS for doing these stuff exactly 1year 1week ago when you were in Singapore:

    Remember the telephone call you made to an ardent fan of yours who was in hospital? Remember leaving a voice mail in my mobile phone as I missed your call?

    [You even left a voice mail on my close friend’s mobile phone, which I replayed and replayed to hear your voice and message that you left me. Thank you so very much. Your message boosted my morale while I was trying not to lament being in hospital…again.]

    Remember the email I wrote you to invite you to visit me at home as I was hooked to an o2 machine at home?

    I so barely wanted to meet you in person (and I still do)
    & so badly wanted to learn more about writing from you but I couldn’t attend the writing seminar by you because first of all the venue was not wheelchair friendly & second, I ended up in hospital for the entire first 3weeks of May 2010.

    For the past 1year 1 week, it has been on my mind to send you a THANK YOU email or e-card, and I am indeed horrible as I procrastinated for more than a year. On those days when I am well–half of the time I am not well–I ended up doing other things; and also when I am well, my computer became “sick” for weeks; and then there were just weeks when I am just not well to sit at the computer to even bother reading my personal emails.

    Mr Yancy (don’t know whether I should just call you Philip or Mr Yancy because you used both in the messages you left me on the mobile phones), thank you so very much for bothering back then in Singapore in May 2010 to call me up despite your very tight schedule.

    I truly appreciate it very much.

    just sincerely yours,
    adeline

    ps: Regarding WHAT GOOD IS GOD?, I can truly identify with the things you wrote about and experienced. I wish you will write about this that has been bugging me: Why do Christians find it such a taboo to talk about death & about preparations for death?
    We are all heading for Heaven to be with God, with Christ, and yet, Christians just don’t want to talk about death, about pain, about any thing related to death, to one’s departure. I do want to expand more here in a proper email but since there is no way to do so, I am using your blog. So sorry about this. THANK YOU for your patience and your time.

  2. Dear Mr. Yancey, I have read and re read most of your books and the books of Dr. Brand. I am a Bible teacher of all ages at different times and I am constantly going back to In His Image. I read the Granny Brand book and had a couple of my grandkids to read it. I feel in love with her. I enjoyed the stories about your families and the homespun lessons that were learned. I’m anxious to learn more about you as a person. I liked Why Bother a lot. Thank you for your love for God and his people.

  3. Hi Philip…I enjoy all your books very much, I read and re-read them all the time. Paul & Margaret Brand have been a blessing to so many people in need!
    Reading all the comments posted in your blog, I can see that there are many others who feel the same way I do – you write as if you are speaking to friends and your work is an incredible inspiration. How much you have helped me in my faith is difficult to put into words.
    From some of the things you have written, I think your wife Janet is pretty special too!
    I especially think of the time when I read that you & Janet were in an area where you met a woman whose face was so very disfigured, and yet Janet, without even thinking gave her a hug. I think it is great when you include some things about Janet and the work she is involved in. I am thankful for both of you!

  4. I am really touched by the books written by Dr. Paul Brand & you. Very powerful. I am going to share and give a presentation about Dr. Paul Brand tomorrow in my sunday school.

    I am working in the area of design and recently in the area of functional footwear and I never knew that there was a connection between the effects of these two diseases ( Diabetes & leprosy).

    Thank you & God bless!

  5. Much of the research on materials was done at Karigiri, associated with CMC Vellore. Perhaps you could connect with some of the researchers there? Dr. Brand did much more at the leprosarium in Carville, Louisiana, though that facility has changed and I don’t know who controls the records. Keep up your good work!

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