Limited time75% off all plans
Get the app

Staphylococcal Scalded Skin Syndrome

Staphylococcal Scalded Skin Syndrome

Staphylococcal Scalded Skin Syndrome

On this page

SSSS Introduction - Scaly Skin Saga

  • A superficial blistering skin condition caused by specific Staphylococcus aureus strains.
  • Primarily affects neonates, infants, and young children (typically <5 years).
  • Pathogenesis: Mediated by exfoliative toxins (ETA and ETB).
    • These toxins specifically cleave desmoglein-1.
    • Site of cleavage: Stratum granulosum of the epidermis.
  • Leads to widespread erythema, bullae formation, and subsequent desquamation.
  • Nikolsky sign is characteristically positive. Nikolsky's Sign in Staphylococcal Scalded Skin Syndrome

⭐ Exfoliative toxins (ETA, ETB) from Staphylococcus aureus cleave desmoglein-1 in the stratum granulosum.

Clinical Features - Red, Raw, Peeling

  • Initial Phase: Prodrome of fever, irritability, and diffuse skin tenderness.
  • Erythema & Bullae Formation:
    • Widespread, tender erythema appears; often starts periorificially (mouth, eyes), neck, axillae, and groin.
    • Within 24-48 hours, large, flaccid, sterile bullae develop.
    • Bullae rupture easily, revealing moist, red, raw "scalded" skin surface.
  • Characteristic Signs:
    • Exquisite pain and tenderness on palpation.
    • Mucous membranes are typically spared (important diagnostic clue).

    ⭐ Nikolsky's sign (gentle rubbing causes exfoliation of the outermost skin layer) is typically positive in SSSS.

  • Distribution: Primarily affects flexural areas, trunk, and periorificial regions; palms and soles usually spared.
  • Resolution: Rapid healing within 7-10 days if treated, typically without scarring.

SSSS rash on infant face

Diagnosis & Differentials - Spotting the Scald

  • Clinical Dx: Sudden onset erythroderma, fever, skin tenderness, positive Nikolsky sign.
  • Skin Biopsy (Gold Standard):
    • Intraepidermal split at stratum granulosum.
    • Minimal/no inflammatory cells in blister.

    ⭐ Skin biopsy in SSSS shows an intraepidermal split at the stratum granulosum level, with minimal or no inflammatory cells in the blister cavity, distinguishing it from TEN.

  • Cultures:
    • Source: Blood, nasopharynx, suspected primary site (NOT intact blister).
    • Blister fluid: Usually sterile.
  • Key Differentials:
    • Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis (TEN): Deeper split (dermo-epidermal), severe mucosal involvement, drug hx.
    • Bullous Impetigo: Localized, culture-positive blisters.
    • Kawasaki Disease: No Nikolsky, coronary concerns.

Management & Prognosis - Soothe & Subdue

  • Core Management (Hospitalize):
    • Supportive: Crucial. IV fluids, electrolyte balance, temperature control, meticulous skin care (emollients, non-adherent dressings to minimize trauma), analgesia.
    • Antibiotics: IV anti-staphylococcal (Nafcillin, Oxacillin, Flucloxacillin). Add Clindamycin (inhibits toxin). Vancomycin if MRSA suspected/confirmed.
  • Prognosis:
    • Children: Generally excellent. Full recovery typically within 7-14 days, usually without scarring.
    • Adults & Immunocompromised: Higher morbidity/mortality.

Corticosteroids are contraindicated in SSSS as they can impair immune response and worsen the condition.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Caused by Staphylococcal exfoliative toxins (ETA, ETB) targeting desmoglein-1.
  • Leads to intraepidermal split at stratum granulosum; Nikolsky sign positive.
  • Presents as tender erythroderma, widespread bullae, and desquamation, mainly in children <5 years.
  • Mucous membranes are characteristically spared, distinguishing it from TEN/SJS.
  • Bullae are sterile as it's toxin-mediated; biopsy shows subcorneal split.
  • Treat with systemic anti-staphylococcal antibiotics and supportive measures.

Unlock the full lesson and continue reading

Signup to continue reading this lesson and unlimited access questions, flashcards, AI notes, and more

Scan to download app

Scan to download
UNLOCK FREE ACCESS
Rezzy — Oncourse's AI Study Mate

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, your AI Study Mate, to explain anything you didn't understand

Everything you need for NEET-PG prep

Get full Oncourse access with lessons, practice questions, flashcards and AI study tools.

GET STARTED FOR FREE