Skin Infections And Infestations Flashcards

1
Q

Signs of skin infection (6)

A

Erythema
Hot
Tender
Pus
Exudate
Fever

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2
Q

Investigations for skin infections

A

Skin swab for microscopy, culture and sensitivities (MC&S)
If clinically indicated:
- FBC, ESR
- U&Es, LFTs, calcium, CRP
- skin biopsy

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3
Q

What is a typical presentation of eczema

A

Rash since childhood which is the same on both sides

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4
Q

What is impetigo (what bacteria causes it)

A

Superficial skin infection (most common skin infection seen in children)
Can be bulbous
staph. Aureus + strep. Pyogenes

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5
Q

What is the classic presentation of impetigo (3)

A

Crusting (often described as a honey yellow colour)
- starts in one small area and spreads over skin due to scratching
Erythema
Generally not unwell

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6
Q

What is the treatment for impetigo (localised and widespread)

A

Localised:
- fusidic acid cream 3-4 times daily for 5 days
- mupirocin cream upto 3x daily for 5 days (if MRSA)

If widespread, severe, bullous:
- antibiotics
- flucloxacillin oral 4 times daily for 7 days
- erythromycin oral 4 times daily for 7 days

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7
Q

What is cellulitis/erysipelas, what organism causes them

A

Erysipelas = superficial infection
Cellulitis = deeper tissues

Strep pyogenes or staph aureus

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8
Q

What are the 1st choice antibiotics (if severe)

A

Flucloxacillin IV
PLUS benzylpenicillin IV

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9
Q

What is the generic treatment for bacterial skin infections

A

Take swab
Start antibiotics
Review after 48hrs:
- check skin swab result
- switch according to sensitivities
If not better in a week consider alternative diagnosis

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10
Q

What would indicate oedema blisters as opposed to cellulitis

A

If blisters are just on one leg

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11
Q

What are oedema blisters

A

Acute exacerbation of oedema
Dorsum of feet
Often erythematous
Can feel hot

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12
Q

What sign would indicate an infection is fungal as opposed to bacterial

A

Fungal infections are usually unilateral and localised (if bilateral most likely not fungal)

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13
Q

What is tinea?

A

Infection by a dermatophyte (mould)

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14
Q

What is the treatment for tinea

A

Infection of feet, body, hands or groin usually responds to topical treatment (Terbinafine or clotrimazole cream)
Infection of scalp or nails requires oral Antifungals

(Check and treat other family members)

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15
Q

When to determine whether eczema or tinea

A

History, distribution (eczema is symmetrical and VERY common)

Steroid treatment given for suspected eczema can mask tinea symptoms (if in doubt take skin scrapings)

(Tinea is mould so likes cool damp places)

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16
Q

What yeast commonly causes yeast infection

A

Candida albicans

17
Q

What is the treatment for candida

A

Topical anti-fungal cream (nystatin, miconazole, ketoconazole cream)

18
Q

What is intertrigo

A

Inflammation in skin fold
- most cases are secondary to friction and irritating effect of sweat
- can be due to infection or skin condition
- common in patients with high BMI

19
Q

What is the treatment of intertrigo

A

Emollient (moisturising treatments)

20
Q

What virus causes hand/finger warts

A

Human papilloma virus

21
Q

What is the risk of transmission of warts

A

Warts are contagious but risk of transmission is very low
Children shouldn’t be excluded from physical activities (cover wart with waterproof plaster when swimming)

22
Q

What is the treatment of warts

A

Normally not necessary…
Give information on viral warts
Treatments aren’t very effective
- wart paints and cryotherapy can stimulate immune system
- warts will go away when patient develops immunity

23
Q

What is molluscum contagiousum

A

Infection caused by DNA pox virus (will resolve when patient develops immunity)

24
Q

What herpes simplex virus 1 and 2 cause

A

Simplex 1 = cold sore
Simplex 2 = genital regions

25
Q

What does the herpes zoster virus

A

Chicken pox virus

26
Q

How does herpes zoster virus (chicken pox spread in the body)

A

Starts on the face and head and spreads down the body

27
Q

What is the outcome of herpes zoster virus (chicken pox)

A

Self-limiting illness
Once you’ve had it you usually don’t get it again

Secondary infection in adulthood = shingles

28
Q

What is the most common infestation

A

Scabies

29
Q

What is scabies

A

Mites causing intensely itchy papular rash (wide differential need a good history)

30
Q

Where are the typical sites of scabies

A

Nipples, genitals, feet, backs of hands/wrists (see photo)

(CLUE: penile nodules - not many other rashes causes this)

31
Q

What in scabies causes the irritation

A

Fecal matter from the scabies mite

32
Q

What are crusted (Norwegian) scabies

A

Exacerbation of scabies caused by neurological disease or immunosuppression

Thousands of mites which is HIGHLY infectious!

33
Q

What is the treatment for scabies

A

Permethrin cream top to toe for 8hours
- 2 applications 1 week apart (very effective but difficult to apply)
Treat all in household and close contacts as can re-infect members of household if they haven’t treated properly

Itch may take 1-4weeks to settle (symptoms treated with steroids)