In France, charcot Foot is managed by podiatrys. Charcot foot (Charcot neuroarthropathy) is a progressive bone and joint destruction of the insensate foot that can collapse the midfoot arch within weeks, most commonly as a complication of diabetic peripheral neuropathy. Annual incidence is roughly 0.3% in diabetes overall and 8.5 per 1,000 in patients with established neuropathy.
Charcot foot (ICD-10: M14.671 right foot; M14.672 left foot) is a non-infectious destructive arthropathy of the foot and ankle that occurs in patients with peripheral neuropathy. The current pathogenic model combines two complementary theories: the neurotraumatic model (repetitive painless microtrauma in an insensate foot accumulates without protective response) and the neurovascular model (autonomic neuropathy causes increased blood flow that triggers osteoclast activation, RANK-ligand release, and accelerated bone resorption). The result is fragmentation, dislocation, and remodeling of midfoot, hindfoot, or ankle joints over weeks to months. Diabetes mellitus accounts for over 75% of contemporary cases; other neuropathies (alcoholic, syphilitic, leprotic, post-traumatic, hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy) can also cause it.
The key symptoms of Charcot Foot are: Unilateral foot or ankle redness, warmth, and swelling — the affected foot is typically 2-7 °C warmer than the contralateral side on infrared thermography., Mild aching or discomfort that is markedly less than the visible inflammation suggests; pain is absent in 30-50% of cases because of the underlying neuropathy., Foot deformity developing over weeks: collapse of the medial longitudinal arch, lateral protrusion of the cuboid, or rocker-bottom plantar contour., A palpable bony prominence under the midfoot once the arch has collapsed, often the cuboid or navicular., Continued ability to walk on the foot despite obvious swelling — a feature that distinguishes Charcot foot from acute infection in most cases., Difficulty fitting normal footwear because of swelling and changing shape., New foot ulceration over the plantar midfoot or lateral border once deformity is established..
Diagnosis is primarily clinical and time-critical: the acute red hot foot in a neuropathic patient is Charcot foot until proven otherwise, and immediate offloading is the highest priority even before imaging confirms the diagnosis. History captures duration of swelling, recent trauma (often minor or unremembered), foot ulcers, and diabetes control. Examination compares the temperature of both feet (infrared thermometer; difference greater than 2 °C is significant), looks for redness, swelling, deformity, and any breach of skin, and quantifies neuropathy with 10 g monofilament, 128 Hz tuning fork, and ankle reflexes. Vascular assessment with pedal pulses and ankle-brachial index excludes ischemia. Plain radiographs of both feet (weight-bearing AP, lateral, oblique) are first-line and may show subluxation, fragmentation, or fracture; up to 30% of cases are radiographically normal in the early acute phase. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the most sensitive test for early disease, demonstrating subchondral bone marrow edema, subluxation, and joint effusion; differentiating Charcot from osteomyelitis can be difficult and may require combined nuclear imaging (white-cell-labeled SPECT or 18F-FDG PET) plus bone biopsy when an ulcer is present. Inflammatory markers (CRP, ESR, white-cell count) are typically normal or mildly elevated in pure Charcot foot; substantial elevation should raise concern for superimposed infection. Pedal pulses and ankle-brachial index identify peripheral arterial disease that may need vascular workup.
Outcomes depend on the speed of diagnosis and adherence to offloading. Diagnosed in the prodromal (Eichenholtz 0) or fragmentation (stage 1) phase and treated with immediate offloading, 80-95% of patients consolidate without permanent deformity within 4-12 months. Delayed presentation with established rocker-bottom deformity, midfoot ulceration, or osteomyelitis carries far worse outcomes: 5-year amputation rates of 28-49% in US Veterans Affairs data, and 5-year mortality from any cause of 28-44% reflecting underlying cardiovascular and renal comorbidities rather than the Charcot foot itself. Bilateral Charcot develops in up to 25% of patients within 10 years; lifelong custom footwear and quarterly podiatry review reduce recurrent ulceration by approximately 50%. Surgical reconstruction in specialist centers achieves limb salvage in 70-90% of unstable cases at 5 years.
Charcot foot has a narrow window for non-operative success. Any neuropathic patient with a new unilateral red, hot, swollen foot should be referred to a multidisciplinary diabetic foot clinic within 24-48 hours. Delays beyond two weeks are strongly associated with permanent deformity, ulceration, and amputation. Joint care from podiatry, endocrinology, orthopedic foot-and-ankle surgery, and orthotics is the standard.
Find specialists →Acute phase offloading typically continues for 8-16 weeks until thermal symmetry returns. Transition to a CROW boot and then to custom protective footwear adds another 3-6 months. Full consolidation on imaging may take 6-12 months. Lifelong custom footwear is mandatory after consolidation.
Weight-bearing exercise is avoided during the active phase. Pool-based exercise (when skin is intact), seated cycling, and upper-body resistance training maintain cardiovascular fitness without loading the foot. Once consolidated, gradual return to walking in protective footwear under podiatry supervision over 6-8 weeks.
Look for a podiatrist or orthopedic foot and ankle surgeon affiliated with a multidisciplinary diabetic foot clinic that performs at least 50 total contact casts per year. Surgical reconstruction should be performed in a center with experience in midfoot and ankle arthrodesis and access to vascular and infectious disease services.
Medically reviewed by AIHealz Medical Editorial Board · May 13, 2026
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