Gangrene Flashcards
Define gangrene and summarise its aetiology and epidemiology
Definition: tissue necrosis, either wet with superimposed infection, dry (ischemiac) or gas gangrene
Aetiology:
- Tissue ischaemia and infarction
- Physical trauma
- Thermal injury
- Gas gangrene is caused by Clostridia perfringens
Risk factors:
- Diabetes
- Peripheral vascular disease
- Leg ulcers
- Malignancy
- Immuosuppression
- Steroid use
- Puncture/surgical wounds
Gangrene is relatively common
Describe the history/presenting symptoms of gangrene
- Pain
- Discolouration of affected area
- Often affects extremities or areas subject to high pressure
What are the signs of gangrene upon physical examination?
- Painful region tends to be erythematous region around gangrenous tissue
- Gangrenous tissue is black because of haemoglobin break down product
- Wet gangrene- tissue becomes boggy with associated pus and a strong odour caused by the activity of anaerobes
- Gas gangrene- spreading infection and destruction of tissues causes overlying oedema, discolouration and crepitus
- Oedema
- Diminished pedal pulses and ankle-brachial index (ischaemic gangrene)
- Low-grade fever and chills (infectious gangrene)
What investigations are used to identify gangrene?
1st investigations to order:
- FBC, U&Es, glucose, CRP and blood culture (expected result leukocytosis, haemoconcentration, or anaemia )
- Comprehensive metabolic panel (may indicate metabolic acidosis, liver derangement, renal failure )
- Serum LDH (elevated if haemolytic anaemia.)
• Rapidly developing haemolytic anaemia with an increased lactate dehydrogenase level is common in patients with gas gangrene.
- Coagulation panel- perform as baseline
- Wound swab, pus/fluid aspirate- MC&S
Investigations to consider:
- Surgical exploration and skin biopsy
- CT angiography
- Magnetic resonance angiography (MRA)
- CT chest and abdomen
- X-ray of affected area- may show gas produced in gas gangrene