Facial cellulitis: Difference between revisions
ClaireLewis (talk | contribs) |
|||
| Line 64: | Line 64: | ||
==External Links== | ==External Links== | ||
==References== | '==References== | ||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
*Tintinalli's Emergency Medicine 7th Edition, pg1557-8 | *Tintinalli's Emergency Medicine 7th Edition, pg1557-8 | ||
[[ | [[Category: ID]] | ||
Revision as of 00:17, 27 September 2016
Background
- Superficial soft tissue infection of the face
- Risk factors include immunosuppression, diabetes, vascular injury (due to radiation or trauma), foreign bodies
- Most commonly caused by S. progenies and S. aureus, including MRSA
Clinical Features
- Erythema, edema, warmth, pain
- Can be associated with chronic illness, trauma, insect bites, allergen exposure, dental caries, radiation exposure
- Consider severe illness or sepsis with systemic symptoms (fever, tachycardia, hypotension, AMS)
Differential Diagnosis
Infectious
- Cellulitis
- Impetigo
- Erysipelas
- Viral exanthem
- Parotitis
- Necrotizing fasciitis
- Anthrax
- Herpes zoster
- Malignant otitis externa
Trauma
- Soft tissue contusion
- Burn
Inflammatory
- Insect bite
- Apical abscess
- Contact dermatitis
Immunologic
- Systemic lupus erythematosus
- Vancomycin flushing reaction
- Angioneurotic edema
Evaluation
- Diagnosis is clinical
- Consider labs, blood cx if patient is immunocompromised, risk factors, renal dysfunction
- Bedside US to identify abscess
- CT can identify deep, extensive infection that involve soft tissues of neck or pharynx
Management
- Analgesics
- Remove foreign bodies from affected area if possible
- Abscesses should be drained
Antibiotics
Tailor antibiotics by regional antibiogram
Outpatient
- 5 day treatment duration
- Cephalexin 500mg PO q6hrs OR
- Add DS 1 tab PO BID if MRSA suspected
- Clindamycin 450mg PO TID covers Strep and Staph
- Cephalexin 500mg PO q6hrs OR
Pediatric Outpatient
- Cephalexin 25-50mg/kg/day PO divided q6-8h (max 500mg/dose) OR
- Add 8-12mg/kg/day (TMP) PO divided BID if MRSA suspected
- Clindamycin 30-40mg/kg/day PO divided TID (max 1.8g/day)
Inpatient
- Vancomycin 20mg/kg IV q12hrs OR
- Clindamycin 600mg IV q8hrs OR
- Linezolid 600mg IV q12hrs OR
- Daptomycin 4mg/kg IV once daily
Pediatric Inpatient
- Vancomycin 15mg/kg IV q6hrs OR
- Clindamycin 10-13mg/kg IV q8hrs (max 900mg/dose) OR
- Linezolid <12yr: 10mg/kg IV q8hrs; >12yr: 600mg IV q12hrs
- Doxycycline 100mg PO/IV q12hrs daily + Cefepime 1g IV q12hrs x 10 days
- Ciprofloxacin 400mg IV q12hrs x 10 days
- Ciprofloxacin 500mg PO q12hrs x 10 days
- TMP/SMX 2 DS tablets PO q12hrs x 10 days
- Ceftriaxone 1g (50mg/kg) IV q24hrs
Disposition
- Most patients can be treated with oral antibiotics as outpatient
- Consider admission for:
- systemic signs of sepsis
- antibiotic intolerance
- immunosuppression
- extensive areas of erythema or induration
- foreign bodies that cannot be removed in ED
- failure of outpatient therapy
See Also
External Links
'==References==
- Tintinalli's Emergency Medicine 7th Edition, pg1557-8
