02-14 Bacterial Skin Infections Flashcards
OBJECTIVES
Normal Skin Flora
Fxn: functions largely to prevent skin infections
Common examples
- Staphylococcus epidermidis - most common coccus on skin
- Corynebacterium spp. common in intertriginous areas.
- Propionibacterium spp. in sebaceous glands.
- Gm-neg bacteria in the axillae and perineum.
- Yeasts (Pityrosporum spp.) are found on skin rich with sebaceous glands.
Dx?
- Causative organism?
- Mechanism of spread?
- Describe typical presentation of subtypes
- Contagious?
- Tx
- Complications
Dx = impetigo
- Organism = S. aureus, group A (ß-hemolytic) strep, or both
- nasal, subungal and perineal colonization may serve as source of infx (S. aureus)
- Spreads via direct contact or auto-innoculation; usually kids
- year-round; heat, humidity, crowding, poor hygiene predispose but not req’d
- Presentation
- non-bullous: moist honey-crust on erythematous base around mouth, nose, extremities; usually Staph a.
- often s/p minor traum
- usu no systemic sx
- may itch
- Bullous [seen here]: yellow, fragile vesicles, surrounding skin intact
- often occurs w/o obvious trauma
- exfoliatin producing S. aureus
- non-bullous: moist honey-crust on erythematous base around mouth, nose, extremities; usually Staph a.
- Yes, it is contagious!
- Tx: abx coverage for staph and strep
- mildcases: topical mupirocin 2% (bacitracin if no insurance)
- wide spread/complicated: penicillinase-resistant pens or 1st gen cephalosporins
- recurrent: treat nares (mupirocin) and body (chlorhexidine or bleach baths (1/2 cup in bathtub for 15 mins)
- Complications: most cases uncomplicated
- may progress to ecthyma (deeper infx) w/o tx
- staph scalded skin syndrome from toxin-producing staph
- Glomerulonephritis (but not rheumatic fever) can complicate G.A.S. impetigo
- abx do not prevent nephritis
N.B. : other lesions can be 2°ly impetiginized (e.g. HSV ulcer → ask “how often does this happen, q few months?”)
Dx?
- Cause?
- Dx options
- Prognosis
- DDx - how to differentiate
Staph Scalded Skin Syn
- Cause: usu. S. aureus, phage group II strains produce exfoliatin that circulate systemically
- split the skin at superficial granular layer
- Clinical Picture: usu kids < 6 y/o; when in adults usu w/ immunocomp e.g. renal failure
- site of infection may/may not be apparent
- prodrome of malaise, fever, irritability
- skin tender → symmetrical sunburn-like erythema around facial orifices, neck, flexures → superficial blisters → sloughs leaving behind moist skin, scales
- heals w/o scarring 10-14d
- Dx: usu. clinical dx; cultures can be negative; if culturing go for nares, conjunctiva, small foci of infection (pustules, etc)
- Prognosis
- good in healthy children (mortality 3%),
- bad in adults (over 50% all adults, up to 100% in adults with underlying diseases)
- DDx: SSSS vs. TEN (toxic epidermal necrolysis)
- Biopsy: TEN is full thickness vs SSSS is partial thickness
- TEN presentation different:
- usu drug rxn
- full thick. sloughing → widespread denudation
- mucosae involved
- high mortality – treated in burn units +/- IVIg
Dx
- Causative Organism
- Predisposing factors
- Names by depth
Folliculitis
Causative Organism
- Usu. S. aureus: predilection for hair follicles
- MRSA: very painful
- Occas. gram-neg
- “hot tub” → Pseudomonas)
- Gm neg folliculitis: pts on tetracycline → elimination of facial Gm(+)s, overgrowth of Gm(-)s
- Rare: Candida, Pityrosporum (yeasts)
Predisposing Factors
- trauma, maceration, occlusion, diabetes, immunosupp
Names by depth
- Folliculitis: small pustules at orifice
- Furuncle: involves entire follicle and surrounding tissue (a boil)
- rubor, calor, dolor and tumor
- Carbuncle: multiple coalescing furuncles, deep into subQ
Treatment
- Superficial folliculitis: topical mupirocin and antibact soap
- Widespread or immunosuppressed or prosethic valves
- PO/IV penicillinase-resistant penicillins, 1st gen cephs (culture rec’d).
- Hot tub: cipro or acetic acid soaks
- Furuncles: compresses, spont rupture may be enough may need incision and drainage
MRSA
- Presentation
- Tx
Culture results should guide abx therapy
- Simple furuncles: incision & drainage alone
- Most community-acquired strains are sensitive to sulfonamides (TMP/SMX) and tetra(doxy,mino)cycline*
- don’t use w/ kiddos b/c stains teeth
- Clindamycin, but some strains are prone to inducible clindamycin resistance
- Topical meds: mupirocin (Bactroban) or silver-containing compounds.
Preventing Recurrence
- Chlorhexidine (Hibiclens) scrubs are useful for skin colonization, use as body wash
• Bleach baths are cheap and effective
• Nasal carriage needs to be addressed (treat with mupirocin)
CDC’s Five C’s of MRSA Transmission
- Crowding
- Frequent Skin-to Skin Contact
- Compromised Skin (cuts, abrasions)
- Contaminated surfaces and other items
- Lack of Cleanliness
Cellulitis
- Organism(s)
- Where is the infection
- Describe lesion/dx
- Predisposing Factors
- Tx
- Complications
Cellulitis
- Organism(s): usu S. pyogenes and/or S. aureus
- Where is the infection: deep dermis/subQ
- Describe lesion/dx: usu. clinical dx; blood culture usu. negative
- “rubor, calor, dolor and tumor”
- ill-defined
- Vesicles and bullae
- associated fever, chills, malaise is common.
- Predisposing Factors:
- Lymphatic damage (i.e. post resection) leads to recurrent infx in drainage area
- Skin break usu. responsible in immunocomp pts
- can be blood borne origin in immunosupp’d pts
- Tx: PO abx (penicillinase-resistant pen, 1st gen. cephalosporins) x 10-14d
- If systemically ill or immunosuppressed, consider IV abx
- Complications
- streptococcus (S. pyogenes) cellulitis can be complicated by glomerulonephritis, lymphadentis,
lymphatic scarring, endocarditis - streptococcal perianal disease: recurrent bright perianal erythema in otherwise-healthy
children;- may also occur in the intertriginous areas such as the neck.
- streptococcus (S. pyogenes) cellulitis can be complicated by glomerulonephritis, lymphadentis,
Dx?
- Organism?
- Clinical picture (vs. DDx)
- Tx
- In kids?
Erysipelas
- usually caused by S. pyogenes
- distinctive clinical picture: more superficial cellulitis with significant lymphatic involvement
- rapidly progressive, well-demarcated (vs. ill-defined in cellulitis), painful erythema, usually on face, peau d’orange texture. Associated systemic symptoms, lymphadenopathy
- treatment with penicillin x 10-14 d
**Hemophilus influenza can cause similar facial infection in non-immunized children
- requires IV antibiotics
Necrotizing Fasciitis
- Organism(s)
- Where is the infection
- Describe lesion/dx
- Predisposing Factors
- Tx
- Complications
Cellulitis
- Organism(s): usu polymicrobial incl strep, S. aureus, E. coli, Bacteroides spp, Clostridium spp
- Often becomes anaerobic 2° to compartment syndrome
- Where is the infection: down to fascia layer
- Describe lesion/dx: Dx w/ MRI, surgical exploration
- resembles cellulitis early on: pain unusually severe
- progresses rapidly with necrosis developing within 24-36 hrs: blue-grey skin, blisters, thin watery discharge
- systemic illness can be profound – usually involves extremities
- Predisposing Factors
- Trauma may or may not contribute
- underlying illnesses (alcoholism, DM, vascular dz, cardiac dz)
- Tx: extensive surgical debridement, broad spec IV abx, IVIG, hyperbaric O2 controversial
- Complications common, include death, deformity, toxic shock syndrome
- Mortality: 20-40%
- involvement of perineum and genitalia = Fournier’s gangrene [SEEN HERE]
How do you call this?
furuncle
How do you call this?
carbuncle
Dx?
- Name lesion
- Organism(s)
- Presentation/Course
- Dx
- Tx
- Complications
Lyme Disease
- Lesion name: Erythema migrans b/c it enlarges rather than being static
- Causative Organism: Borrelia burgdorferi
- Vector: deer (Ixodes spp) tick
- Presentation/Course: incubation period usually 1 to 2 weeks, but canbe 3-30 days.
- First sign usu = “bulls-eye” rash in 70-80% of pts
- starts small, then expands over several days
- Dx: ELISA for Abs followed by Western Blot if (+)
- False negs possible if tested early dz (false positives if late)
- Tx: many abx options: doxycycline common
- Complications
- Bell’s palsy
- arthritis
- meningitis
- other neuro sx
- carditis and arrhythmias
Dx?
- Causative Organism
- Transmission by?
- Presentation by stages
- Dx options
- Tx
- Complications
Syphilis (2° on front of card; 1° penile here)
- Causative Organism: Treponema pallidum
- Transmission by: sexual contact, mother to fetus in utero, blood transfusion, skin contact w/ damage skin
- Presentation by stages
- Primary: painless, punched out chancre, wicked infectious
- Secondary: 4-10 wks s/p chancre (spirochetes spread throughout body & in skin lesions)
- malaise/feel crummy
- Palms, soles, muc. membranes (most contagious)
- Diverse in morphology – reddish brown macules, papules, pustules, annular and scaly.
- Condyloma lata – grey white mucous membrane lesions, painless and alopecia “moth eaten”
- Tertiary: primarily affects cardiovascular and CNS
- Dx options:
- non-treponemal (VDRL and PRP)
- Treponemal: confirms (+) or equivocal nontreponemal test (eg. Fluorescent
treponemal antibody-absorption (FTA-ABS))
- Tx: Pen G benzathine for all stages
- Complications: neurosyph, etc.
Congential Syphilis (not in slides but in notes) FYI
- High rates of spontaneous abortion and stillbirth
- Cutaneous findings similar to adult secondary syphilis
- Snuffles – mucopurulent rhinitis
Later manifestations
- Saddle nose – due to destruction of the nasal septum
- Saber shins – bowing of the tibia
- Clutton’s joints – inflammation of knee joints.
- Hutchinson’s teeth – widely spaced and notched incisors
- Mulberry molars – molars have too many cusps.