2014年8月26日 星期二

Management of Skin and Soft Tissue Infections



IDSA Guideline 2014 for Management of Skin and Soft Tissue Infections

Clinical Infectious Diseases 2014; 59(2):147–59


Abscesses, Furuncles, Carbuncles
  • I&D, Gram stain and culture of pus

Erysipelas and Cellulitis
  • Mild: without systemic signs of infection (SIRS), strep.
  • Moderate: with SIRS, systemic antibiotics, MSSA
  • Severe: SIRS + hypotension, MRSA and strep, vancomycin + [tazocin or imipenem/meropenem]
  • Outpatient therapy: for patients who do not have SIRS, altered mental status, or hemodynamic instability
  • Hospitalization: deeper or necrotizing infection, poor adherence to therapy, severely immunocompromise, oroutpatient treatment failing
  • prednisone 40 mg daily for 7 days could be considered in nondiabetic adult patients

Surgical Site Infections
  • Suture removal plus I&D
  • trunk, head and neck, or extremities: MSSA, MRSA
  • axilla, GI tract, perineum, or female genital tract: [cephalosporin or fluoroquinolone] + metronidazole

Necrotizing Fasciitis, gas gangrene, Fournier Gangrene
  • Urgent surgical exploration
  • HBO therapy not recommended
  • poly-microbial, streptococci, MRSA: vancomycin + [Tazocin or a carbapenem] or Rocephin + metronidazole
  • group A strep or clostridial : PCN + clindamycin

Pyomyositis
  • MRI, CT, sono
  • Early drainage
  • Cultures of blood and abscess
  • Initial empirical therapy: vancomycin
  • MSSA: cefazolin or oxacillin

Animal/Human Bite
  • Tetanus toxoid
  • primary wound closure: not recommended (exception; face)
  • unasyn or augmentin

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