Gas gangrene
Background
- Gas gangrene (clostridial myonecrosis) is a rapidly progressive, life-threatening infection of deep muscle tissue caused by toxin-producing Clostridium species, most commonly C. perfringens.
- It is the most rapidly spreading and lethal soft tissue infection in humans — the infection can advance at a rate of up to 6 inches per hour and carries 100% mortality if untreated.[1] Early recognition and emergent surgical debridement are the most important determinants of survival.
- ~1,000 cases per year in the United States[1]
- Historically a battlefield injury; now most commonly associated with trauma, post-surgical wounds (especially GI/biliary), and injection drug use
- Two major subtypes:
- Traumatic gas gangrene: Clostridial spores inoculated into deep tissue via penetrating trauma, crush injury, compound fracture, or surgery. Devitalized, ischemic tissue provides the anaerobic environment for germination
- Spontaneous (non-traumatic) gas gangrene: No preceding wound; associated with occult GI malignancy (especially colon cancer), neutropenia, diabetes, and immunosuppression. Most commonly caused by C. septicum (which is aerotolerant)[1]
- Causative organisms: C. perfringens (~80–95%), C. septicum, C. novyi, C. histolyticum, C. sordellii
- C. sordellii — increasingly associated with black tar heroin injection ("skin popping") and post-partum/post-abortion infections[1]
- Mortality with optimal treatment (surgery + antibiotics ± HBO): 20–30%; without treatment: 100%[1]
Clinical Features
Classic presentation
- Sudden onset of severe pain — characteristically out of proportion to exam findings — this is the earliest and most important clinical clue[2]
- Pain may begin 6–72 hours after injury or surgery (median ~24 hours)
- Skin changes progress rapidly:
- Initially shiny, tense, and edematous
- Progresses to bronze or dusky discoloration
- Then hemorrhagic bullae and frank skin necrosis (dark purple-black)
- Crepitus — palpable (and sometimes audible) subcutaneous gas; a late finding — do not wait for this to make the diagnosis
- Thin, sero-sanguineous ("dishwater") discharge with a characteristic sickly sweet or foul odor
- Wound drainage may contain gas bubbles
- Tachycardia out of proportion to fever — a hallmark of toxin-mediated illness
- Rapid progression to sepsis, shock, multi-organ failure, and death if not treated
Systemic toxicity
- Alpha-toxin (lecithinase/phospholipase C): Destroys cell membranes → massive tissue necrosis, hemolysis, myocardial depression, capillary leak
- Theta-toxin (perfringolysin O): Pore-forming toxin → vascular injury, platelet aggregation, leukocyte suppression
- Intravascular hemolysis can be severe — hemoglobinuria, jaundice, DIC
- Renal failure from myoglobinuria and hemoglobinuria
Differential Diagnosis
- Necrotizing fasciitis (most important differential — may be indistinguishable early; NF primarily involves fascia/subcutaneous tissue rather than muscle, but both require emergent surgery)
- Cellulitis (non-necrotizing; should not have crepitus, bullae, or systemic toxicity)
- Non-clostridial gas-forming infections (Klebsiella, E. coli, mixed anaerobes — gas on imaging does not equal clostridial gas gangrene)
- Necrotizing myositis (non-clostridial)
- Compartment syndrome
- Clostridial cellulitis (more superficial; less systemic toxicity; gas in subcutaneous tissue but muscle is spared)
- Deep venous thrombosis (pain and swelling without skin necrosis)
- Pyomyositis (abscess within muscle — more indolent course)
Skin and Soft Tissue Infection
- Cellulitis
- Erysipelas
- Lymphangitis
- Folliculitis
- Hidradenitis suppurativa
- Skin abscess
- Necrotizing soft tissue infections
- Mycobacterium marinum
Look-A-Likes
- Sporotrichosis
- Osteomyelitis
- Deep venous thrombosis
- Pyomyositis
- Purple glove syndrome
- Tuberculosis (tuberculous inflammation of the skin)
Necrotizing rashes
- Necrotizing soft tissue infections
- Purpura fulminans
- Drug rash
- Levamisole toxicity
- Heparin-induced skin necrosis
- Warfarin-induced skin necrosis
Evaluation
Workup
Gas gangrene is a clinical and surgical diagnosis — do NOT delay surgery for labs or imaging
Laboratory:
- CBC (leukocytosis or leukopenia; may show left shift; look for absence of neutrophils in wound — clostridial toxins destroy WBCs)
- Basic metabolic panel (renal failure, metabolic acidosis, hyperkalemia)
- Lactate (often markedly elevated)
- CK (elevated from muscle necrosis — may indicate concurrent rhabdomyolysis)
- Coagulation studies (DIC is common)
- Type and screen/crossmatch (anticipate massive transfusion needs — hemolysis + surgical blood loss)
- Blood cultures (positive in ~15–20%)
- Gram stain of wound discharge: Large Gram-positive rods with a paucity of leukocytes (absence of WBCs is characteristic of anaerobic/clostridial infections)[1]
Imaging:
- Plain radiographs: Gas tracking along muscle planes in a feathering pattern is classic and an early finding. However, absence of gas does not exclude the diagnosis
- CT: More sensitive for detecting gas and defining the extent of infection; gas within muscle (not just subcutaneous tissue) supports myonecrosis
- MRI: Most sensitive for delineating muscle involvement but should not delay surgery
- Do NOT delay surgical exploration for imaging if clinical suspicion is high
Diagnosis
- Clinical diagnosis based on the triad of: (1) severe pain out of proportion, (2) rapidly progressive skin changes with crepitus, and (3) systemic toxicity
- Confirmed at surgery: Necrotic muscle that is dark red-to-black or greenish, non-contractile, and does not bleed when cut[2]
- Gram stain showing large Gram-positive rods without leukocytes is highly suggestive
- Culture confirms Clostridium species but takes 24–48 hours — do not wait for culture results
Management
This is a surgical emergency — time to OR is the #1 prognostic factor
Resuscitation (simultaneous with surgical planning):
- Aggressive IV crystalloid resuscitation; anticipate massive volume requirements
- Vasopressors for refractory shock
- Correct coagulopathy (FFP, platelets, cryoprecipitate for DIC)
- Transfuse PRBCs for hemolysis and surgical blood loss
- Correct hyperkalemia and metabolic acidosis
Surgery:
- Emergent, radical surgical debridement of all necrotic muscle and tissue — the single most important intervention[3]
- Amputation may be necessary and life-saving — do not delay if proximal spread is occurring
- Re-exploration ("second look") at 24–48 hours is standard — further debridement is almost always required
- Truncal or abdominal gas gangrene has the worst prognosis (limited debridement options)
Antibiotics:
- Empiric (before culture confirmation): Broad-spectrum coverage as for any NSTI:
- Vancomycin + piperacillin-tazobactam (or meropenem), PLUS clindamycin[3]
- Confirmed clostridial gas gangrene (IDSA recommended):
- Penicillin-allergic: Clindamycin + metronidazole; or meropenem + clindamycin
Hyperbaric oxygen (HBO):
- Adjunctive — does NOT replace surgery
- HBO inhibits clostridial growth and alpha-toxin production; may improve tissue demarcation
- IDSA does not routinely recommend HBO as it has not been proven beneficial in controlled studies and may delay resuscitation and surgical debridement[3]
- Consider if available and the patient is stable enough for transfer to an HBO facility; most useful for truncal involvement where surgical options are limited
- Never delay OR for HBO
Disposition
- ICU admission for all confirmed or suspected cases — expect hemodynamic instability, need for repeat surgical debridement, and massive resuscitation
- Emergent surgical consultation — should be called as soon as gas gangrene is suspected, ideally before imaging
- Infectious disease consultation for antibiotic guidance
- If spontaneous gas gangrene without a precipitating wound, workup for occult colorectal malignancy should be pursued after the acute illness resolves (C. septicum bacteremia has a strong association with GI cancer)[1]
- Transfer to a higher level of care if your facility lacks surgical capability or ICU capacity — time to surgery is the critical variable; do not delay transfer
See Also
- Necrotizing fasciitis
- Necrotizing soft tissue infections
- Wet gangrene
- Cellulitis
- Sepsis
- Diabetic foot infection
- Compartment syndrome
External Links
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Gas Gangrene. StatPearls. NCBI Bookshelf. Updated 2023.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Clostridial Myositis and Myonecrosis (Gas Gangrene). Undersea & Hyperbaric Medical Society.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Stevens DL, et al. Practice guidelines for the diagnosis and management of skin and soft tissue infections: 2014 update by IDSA. Clin Infect Dis. 2014;59(2):e10-e52.
- ↑ Gas Gangrene (Clostridial Myonecrosis) Treatment & Management. Medscape. Accessed 2025.
