dc.description.abstract | Background: The peripheral neuropathy is the cause of hospitalization for patients with
diabetes mellitus (DM) and damages kidney function due to the circulatory system with
high sugar levels. High sugar levels in DM patients with diabetic wounds can trigger
glomerular damage resulting in the decrease of kidney function.
Purpose: This study aims to analyze the relationship between the degree of diabetic
wounds and kidney functions in patients with DM.
Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted on 723 DM patients who experienced
diabetic wounds in a hospital in Mojokerto, East Java, Indonesia. A purposive sampling
technique was used to recruit the samples. The data of this study were medical records
of diabetic patients. A simple linear regression test was employed to analyze the data.
Results: The result showed that the degree of the diabetic wound was significantly
related to kidney function damage (p=0.000). The relationship between the degree of
diabetic wounds and the decline in kidney function was shown by an R-squared value of
0.768, meaning that the degree of diabetic wound affected the decline of kidney
function by 76.8%, while the 23.2% was affected by other factors.
Conclusion: The degree of diabetic injury affects the decline of kidney function in DM
patients by 76.8%. Nurses should do health promotion about controlling blood sugar
levels in DM patients with the prevention of four pillars of diabetes, including
education, nutrition, physical activity, and stress. | en_US |