16- Soft tissue infections Flashcards

1
Q

manifestations of all soft tissue infections

A

heat, erythema, tenderness, pain

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2
Q

impetigo is found in which age group

A

children

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3
Q

erysipela is found in which age group

A

adults

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4
Q

most common etiology for soft tissue infections

A

S aureaus, S pyogenes

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5
Q

does S aureaus colonizes us

A

yes

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6
Q

epidermidis: impetigo
superficial dermis: folliculitis
deep derma: furuncles, erysipela
subcutaneous: cellulitis, fascitis, piolyositis

A

s aureus infection according to zone

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7
Q

staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome is due to what type of toxin

A

exfoliative exotoxin produced by S aureus

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8
Q

community acquired MRS occurs due to

A

S aureus strains that are resistant to oxacillin, that produce panton velentine toxin (leucocidine)

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9
Q

tx of S aureus based on location

A

superficial infection: disinfection, topical tx
invasive/extensive infection: systemic tx
abscesses/necrotic areas: surgical drainage or debridement
PVL producing strains: linezolid, clindamycin

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10
Q

impetigo: def, incidence, cause

A
  • common crusted (NOT SCAR) and superficial infection skin
  • 2-5 y/o
  • B hemolytic streptococci/ S aureus
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11
Q

tx for impetigo

A

topical tx with mupirosin
oral antibiotics: amoxicillin/clauvulonate, cephalosporins
if MRSA is suspected: trimethorpim, sulfamethoxazole, clindamycin

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12
Q

erysipelas: def, cause, rf

A
  • acute infection with rash of the upper dermis and superficial lymphatics
  • B hemolytic group A streptococcus
  • impaired lymphatic drainage, immune deficiency, diabetes, alcoholism, skin ulceration
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13
Q

erysipelas vs cellulitis

A

e is more supercifical than c

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14
Q

onset of erysipelas and symptoms

A

onset is sudden, one day, fever, shivering, vomiting, enlarged lymph nodes
skin is bright red shiny and hot, the lesion has defined borders

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15
Q

tx for erysipelas

A

B lactams (macrolides, or clindamycin for allergic pts)

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16
Q

cellulitis def, etiology? sharp or not borders?

A
  • bacterial non necrotizing inflammation of the inner layers of the skin and subcutaneous tissues; BORDERS NOT SHARP
  • streptococci, and S aureus
17
Q

tx for cellulitis

A

B lactams

18
Q

anaerobic cellulitis etiology? RF? TX?

A

clostridium perfringens or C septicum (is necrotizing cellulitis that spares muscle fascia)
Often due to dirty wounds, contaminated surgical wounds
Surgical debridment is essential

19
Q

necrotizing fascitis affects which layer of skin? types?

A

is bacterial infection of subcutanous tissues producing soft tissue necrosis

  • type 1: polymicrobial (anaerobes, facultative anaerobes, enterobacteria)
  • type 2: group A strepto
20
Q

which is more common type of necrotizing fascitis

A
type 1 (70%)
note the disproportion between intense pain and local appearance of the lesion; skin crackes due to air collection
21
Q

apperance of type 1 necrotizing fasciitis

A

turns from reddish to gray (necrosis) with bullous formation

22
Q

type 2 necrotizing fascitis is aka

A

haemolitis streptococcal gangrene

occurs in young healthy adults with history of injury

23
Q

lymphatic filariasis is due to

A

nematodes (roundworms) that inhabit lymphatics and subcutaneous tissues
- wuchereria bancrofti
- brugia malayi
- brugia timori
infection is transmitted by mosquito vectors

24
Q

dx of filariasis

A

ID microfilariae in blood smear by microscopic examination

IgG4

25
Q

tx of filariasis

A

diethylcarbamazine (kills microfilariae and some adult worms)
NOTE that ppl with lymphedema and elephantiasis are unlikely to benefit form this, bc most people with lymphedema are not actively infected

26
Q

Two most common pathogens that cause soft tissue infection are

A

S aureus

S pyogenes

27
Q

Healing pattern of impetigous lesions

A

they heal slowly and leave depigmentated areas but DO NOT FORM SCARS

28
Q

Does erysipelas relapse

A

yes

29
Q

T/F cellulitis lesions grow in size over days, and do not have defined borders

A

T

The skin turns white under pressure, is painful

30
Q

SX, DX, TX for type 1 necrotizing fascitits

A

high fever
very early surgical intervention is crucial
DX needs imaging
Antibacterial tx targeting a large # of bacteria is used

31
Q

MX of skin ulcers

A
  • evaluate extension of the lesion (exclude osteomyelitis)
  • plan for wound dressing
  • empiric antibiotic therapy
  • Microbiological exams should be done on biopsy of deep vital tissue (superficial swabs are useless)
32
Q

What 3 things are involved in pathogenesis of diabetic foot

A

peripheral nerve dysfunction, immunosuppression, peripheral artery dx

33
Q

Do you need culture to treat diabetic foot? How do you tx it?

A

yes, and surgical debridement, note that it is often with osteomyelitis

34
Q

T/F most people infected with filiarsis will never have symptoms

A

T

35
Q

Filarial infection can also cause tropical pulmonary eosinophilia syndrome, typically in Asia. Symptoms include cough, shortness of breath, and
wheezing. The eosinophilia is often accompanied by high levels of Immunoglobulin E ( IgE)
and antifilarial antibodies.

A

T

36
Q

What do you stain the smear of filiarisis for

A

giemsa, or hematoxylin and eosin

37
Q

W. bancrofti, B. malayi, and B. timori can be differentiated from each other on blood smear by their morphologic
characteristics. W. bancrofti and both Brugia species have acellular sheath stains
and are visible on light microscopy. B. malayi has terminal and subterminal nuclei
in its tail; W. bancrofti has no nuclei in its tail.

A

T