Soft Tissue Infections

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STI Classification - Skin Deep Trouble

  • Superficial Infections (Epidermis/Dermis):
    • Impetigo: Epidermal infection, honey-colored crusts.
    • Erysipelas: Dermal, superficial lymphatics; well-demarcated, raised, erythematous.
    • Cellulitis: Deeper dermis, subcutaneous tissue; ill-defined borders, spreading.
  • Deeper Infections (Subcutaneous/Fascia/Muscle):
    • Cutaneous Abscess: Localized pus in dermis/subcutaneous tissue.
    • Necrotizing Fasciitis: Rapidly progressive, involves fascia; surgical emergency!
    • Myositis/Pyomyositis: Muscle inflammation/abscess.

Skin layers and depth of soft tissue infections

⭐ Fournier's gangrene is a type of necrotizing fasciitis affecting the perineal, genital, or perianal regions, often polymicrobial.

Microbiology & Risks - The Nasty Crew

  • Causative Agents:
    • Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA/MRSA): Most common.
    • Streptococcus pyogenes (GAS): Cellulitis, erysipelas, necrotizing fasciitis.
    • Gram-negatives (Pseudomonas, E. coli): Immunocompromised, burns, diabetic foot infections.
    • Anaerobes (Clostridium, Bacteroides): Gas gangrene, deep abscesses.
    • Polymicrobial infections are frequent.
  • Patient Vulnerabilities:
    • Skin barrier disruption: Trauma, surgery, bites, IV catheters.
    • Impaired immunity: Diabetes Mellitus (DM), PVD, steroids, HIV.
    • Systemic factors: Obesity, malnutrition, lymphedema, extremes of age.

Clostridium perfringens is notorious for causing gas gangrene, characterized by crepitus and rapid tissue destruction.

Diagnosis & Scoring - Red Alert Signs

  • Clinical: History, exam (local signs: erythema, warmth, tenderness, fluctuance).
  • LRINEC Score (Lab Risk Indicator for Necrotizing Fasciitis):
    • Parameters: CRP >150, WBC >15, Hb <13.5, Na <135, Creatinine >1.6, Glucose >180.
    • Interpretation: <6 (low risk), 6-7 (intermediate), ≥8 (high risk NF).
  • Red Alerts (Suspect NF):
    • Pain out of proportion
    • Tense edema, bullae, skin necrosis
    • Crepitus (gas)
    • Systemic toxicity (fever, ↑HR, ↓BP)
    • Wooden-hard induration
    • Rapid progression despite antibiotics
    • Serum lactate >2 mmol/L

Necrotizing Fasciitis Progression & Debridement

⭐ Pain out of proportion to clinical findings is a key early indicator of necrotizing fasciitis.

Treatment Strategies - Slash & Dose

Primary goals: control infection, prevent spread, preserve function.

  • Slash (Surgery):
    • I&D: For abscesses.
    • Debridement: Aggressive removal of ALL non-viable tissue; crucial for necrotizing infections. Re-look PRN.
    • Fasciotomy: If compartment syndrome.
  • Dose (Antibiotics):
    • Empirical: Broad-spectrum IV (e.g., Vancomycin + Piperacillin-Tazobactam). Add Clindamycin for toxin suppression (📌).
    • Definitive: Tailor to C&S.
  • Supportive: Fluids, nutrition, tetanus toxoid. HBO for clostridial myonecrosis/severe NF.

⭐ Early, aggressive surgical debridement is the single most important determinant of outcome in necrotizing soft tissue infections.

Key STIs - Deadly Details

  • Necrotizing Fasciitis (NF):
    • "Flesh-eating"; rapid fascial spread.
    • Type I (polymicrobial), Type II (GAS).
    • Severe pain out of proportion, crepitus, bullae. LRINEC >6.
    • Tx: Aggressive surgical debridement, broad-spectrum Abx.
  • Gas Gangrene (Clostridial Myonecrosis):
    • C. perfringens (alpha-toxin); muscle necrosis, gas.
    • Bronze skin, foul odor, crepitus.
    • Tx: Debridement, Penicillin + Clindamycin, HBO.
  • Fournier's Gangrene:
    • NF of perineum/genitalia; polymicrobial.
    • Rapid onset, pain, swelling, crepitus, necrosis.
    • Tx: Urgent debridement, broad-spectrum Abx.

⭐ > Fournier's gangrene carries high mortality (20-40%) despite aggressive therapy, often linked to diabetes.

Progression of Necrotising Fasciitis

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Cellulitis: common S. pyogenes; erysipelas is superficial with sharply demarcated borders.
  • Skin abscesses: typically S. aureus (MRSA), require incision and drainage (I&D).
  • Necrotizing fasciitis: surgical emergency needing urgent, wide debridement. Fournier's gangrene affects the perineum.
  • Gas gangrene (C. perfringens): presents with crepitus, muscle necrosis; requires surgery & antibiotics.
  • Diabetic foot infections: often polymicrobial, need aggressive debridement, broad-spectrum antibiotics.
  • Bite wounds (Pasteurella, Eikenella) often warrant prophylactic amoxicillin-clavulanate.

Practice Questions: Soft Tissue Infections

Test your understanding with these related questions

An 18-month-old child presents with cellulitis of the leg and SpO2 of 88%. There is no prior history of hospitalization or illness. What is the most probable organism?

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Flashcards: Soft Tissue Infections

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In Fournier's gangrene, the _____ are spared due to the intra-abdominal origin of their blood supply

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In Fournier's gangrene, the _____ are spared due to the intra-abdominal origin of their blood supply

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