NewsHealthDiabetic man just hours away from losing his legs thanks to festering...

Diabetic man just hours away from losing his legs thanks to festering verrucae has limbs saved last minute 

A RELIEVED diabetic has had both legs saved after surgeons were on the brink of amputating below the knees due to festering verrucae. 

Medics were just hours away from sanctioning the drastic surgery after Barry Mayled’s feet were plagued by horrific ulcers which worsened despite extensive treatments. 

The Welshman’s legs were saved at the last minute thanks to a microwave treatment for skin lesions which delivered the healing he’d hoped for. 

Barry, an architect and garden designer from Penarth in the Vale of Glamorgan, paid tribute to the Swift device, invented by Scottish health tech pioneers, Emblation. 

Barry left - Chelsea 2004
Barry left – Chelsea 2004

Leg amputations are a notorious complication of diabetes, which can cause reduced blood flow and nerve damage in the lower limbs.  

As a result, wounds, ulcers and infections can become gangrenous and require amputation. 

Barry, 73, has lived with diabetes since the age of 38, and in his case a simple verruca got out of control when the relatively harmless lesion became infected. 

It proved resistant to multiple treatments over four years, spreading to both feet, with painful growths behind his big toes leaving him barely able to walk. 

As a last resort, a podiatrist embarked on treatment with Swift, which uses targeted low energy doses of microwaves to stimulate the immune system. 

After monthly treatments over a year, his feet were completely healed – a process captured in a series of photographs. 

Barry said problems started in late 2017: “I developed what looked like a bruise on my right foot. 

“Later, my wife and I were down in Devon and the bruise got redder and sorer, and eventually burst, becoming septic. 

“That was the start of four agonising years of trying to get the correct treatment after it then spread to my left foot. 

“It lingered on to the point where my NHS podiatrist called the surgeon in – who was shaking his head upon the sight of my feet. 

“They took X-rays and found the infection was getting closer to the bone, increasing the risk of osteomyelitis. 

“As a result of the X-rays there was a little conference going on around me. The surgeon was there, the senior podiatrist from the wound clinic and the person dealing with me directly. 

“They all told me that my only option was to have both limbs put into plaster which would immobilise me, destroying my career with no guarantee it would work.” 

With little hope, Barry turned to podiatrist Tracy Davies of Toetal Footcare Ltd in Cardiff who was using innovative microwave technology to treat verrucae on her patients’ feet. 

Barry underwent seven individual applications of the Swift microwave treatment between July 2022 to April 2023, on five areas of his right foot and three on his left. 

The podiatrists at Toetal Footcare Ltd have conducted around 1,000 individual treatments with the Swift device and have seen amazing results for patients of all ages, although Barry’s recovery is the most remarkable to date. 

Tracy said: “When I first saw Barry at the practice, both his feet were severely ulcerated. 

“He had seen his dermatologist who had confirmed the presence of verrucae tissue in the ulcerations, and he was desperate to prevent amputation. 

“My colleagues in the NHS had provided excellent wound care but it was time to look at the problem from a different angle. 

“I wondered if I used Swift to treat the verrucae, would I be able to heal the ulcerations and therefore save Barry’s feet from amputation? Quite frankly we had nothing to lose.” 

Tracy removed dead and damaged tissue and began the microwave treatment and over time, Barry’s verrucae and ulcerations started to reduce, completing healing by September 2023. 

She added: “I was amazed by the remarkable turnaround in Barry’s condition.  

“My business partner and I have both been HCPC registered podiatrists for more than 40 years and Swift has shown the most effective treatment outcomes for verrucae we have treated to date. 

“Barry’s case has highlighted verrucae infection as a possible cause of foot ulcerations failing to heal and has increased the possibilities of using Swift in such cases. 

“This could be far-reaching in the treatment of non-healing foot ulcerations, thus preventing unnecessary amputations.” 

The treatment has transformed Barry’s life and he is now eligible for double knee replacement surgery. 

Barry added: “Now I haven’t got a problem with my feet. They’re fine. It’s just a question of biting the bullet on when I want to have my knees done. 

“Then I’ll be the bionic man and I can maybe enjoy my retirement. 

“There will be many more people who are in my situation, so I would urge everyone to seek out this swift treatment and hope that in the future more people can benefit from this technology. 

“It saved my life. I’m still working and I’m on building sites and everything, and without my legs, that would have been the end of it. 

“As a sole practitioner, my career would have ended if the amputations were carried out. 

“At one point I was in hospital surrounded by medics and things were so bad that the main surgeon was just shaking his head. 

“There was pretty much nothing left to try and it was a matter of ‘when’ not ‘if’ my legs would have to be amputated below the knees.” 

Swift is a device backed by health tech investors and has been rolled out by podiatrists across the globe to treat verrucae and plantar warts. 

The technology is also undergoing extensive medical testing to establish its efficacy in treating a host of other conditions including pre-cancerous and cancerous lesions like Basal Cell Carcinoma. 

The Emblation team believe it will eventually revolutionise treatment across multiple conditions. 

Swift was developed in 2016 by scientists Gary Beale and Eamon McErlean who met while studying at Edinburgh’s Heriot-Watt University. 

They went on to launch parent company, Emblation, headquartered in Stirling, Scotland. 

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