Other Soft tissue infections Flashcards

1
Q

Define Pyomyositis?

A

Infection deep in the striated muscle, often as an abscess.

Its often 2* to another infection

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2
Q

What causes pyomyositis?

A

Mostly Staph Aureus

Other bacteria, TB an fungi can cause it.

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3
Q

What factors can predispose you to pyomyositis?

A

Any immunocompromising disease:

  • HIV
  • Malignancy
  • DM
  • Liver Cirrhosis
  • IVDA

As well as Rheumatological Disease

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4
Q

How does Pyomyositis present?

A

Fever, Pain and a woody induration of the muscle

Eventually septicaemia and shock

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5
Q

How do you test for pyomyositis?

A

If you get a patient with fever, pain in muscles and stiffening of muscles think infection.
Do a CT or MRI looking for muscle loss & abscesses as well as culture/gram staining for systemic infection

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6
Q

How do you treat pyomyositis?

A

Drain the abscess and give Abx

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7
Q

What is Septic Bursitis?

A

Infection of the cavities within synovial joints, mostly patellar or elbow joints
Often 2* to an adjacent skin infection

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8
Q

What causes septic bursitis?

A

Staph Aureus

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9
Q

What are the risk factors for septic bursitis?

A

Immunosuppression
DM
IVDA

Renal Disease
Alcoholism
Rheumatoid Arthritis

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10
Q

How does Septic Bursitis present?

A

Cellulitis, infection of adjacent deep dermis & subcutaneous fat.

Swelling & Warmth

Fever

Pain in the joint on movement

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11
Q

How do we test for septic bursitis?

A

Aspirate the synovial fluid for culture

Most are treated empirically with Abx

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12
Q

Define Infectious Tenosynovitis?

A

An infection of synovial sheats around tendons, generally in the flexor muscles and the hands

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13
Q

What causes infectious tenosynovitis?

A

Staph Aureus & Streptococci

A chronic infection can be due to mycobacteria or fungi

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14
Q

How is Infectious Tenosynovitis spread?

A

Penetrating trauma

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15
Q

How would Infectious Tenosynovitis present?

A

Mostly in the hands:

  • Semiflexed position
  • Erythematous Fusiform swelling (of a finger)
  • Tender tendon
  • Pain on extension
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16
Q

How do we treat Infectious Tenosynovitis?

A

Empirical Abx and a surgical review in case it requires surgical cleaning/removal of tissue

17
Q

Whats the main organism behind IV catheter infections>

A

Staph Aureus

18
Q

How does an IV catheter infection progress, tested for and treated?

A

Local SSTI -> Cellulitis -> Necrosis

It can seed into other areas e.g. endocarditis or osteomyelitis

Test with a blood culture after clinical diagnosis

Treat with 14 days Abx course + remove the cannula, express any pus and do an echo for endocarditis

19
Q

How do we prevent IV catheter infections?

A

Remove unused catheters, otherwise change them every 72 hours.

Monitor patients for thrombophlebitis indicative of SSTI

USe aspetic method when isnerting the canula

20
Q

What are the main organisms behind Surgical Site Infections?

A

Staph Aureus
E. Coli
Pseudomonas Aeruginosa

21
Q

describe the classes of surgical site infections?

A

Class 1 = a clean wound that ets infected

Class 2 = Clean-contaminated wound (i.e. minor break in the surgical technique)

Class 3 = Contaminated wound (often a traumatic wound)

Class 4 = A dirty or infected wound of tissue that’s necrotic or devilatised

22
Q

What factors predispose you to surgical site infections?

A
DM
Smoking
Obesity
Malnutrition
Steroids
Staph Aureus Colonisation

Also shaving a surgical site or perioperative hypoxia

23
Q

How do you manage a surgical site infection?

A

Culture from the site + Abx