In necrotic skin and soft tissue infections, the patient should be transferred without delay to a hospital where surgical treatment can be carried out.
Treatment in an intensive care unit is often required.
The causative agent is searched for by blood cultures and by culture from possibly available tissue specimens.
Types of infection
Cellulitis
Acute skin infection extending deeper than erysipelas, down to the subcutaneous adipose tissue. Differentiation between erysipelas and cellulitis is, however, ill-defined.
Usually located in the extremities, but may be encountered in any part the body.
It is important to recognize orbital cellulitis because of the serious complications involved (picture 1).
Necrotizing skin and soft tissue infections (necrotizing fasciitis)
Life-threatening infection of the skin or soft tissues, associated with severe tissue necrosis
Rare (incidence e.g. in the United States about 4/100 000)
The infection spreads rapidly.
Early identification is important as this may restrict the extent of the necessary tissue resections and improve prognosis.
When a necrotizing skin or soft tissue infection is suspected, the patient should be referred for hospital care without delay.
Fournier's gangrene is a special form of necrotizing fasciitis that develops in the perianal region.
Gas gangrene
Gas gangrene is caused by common Clostridioides species found in the soil and the intestinal flora.
Aetiology
The most common causative agents in necrotizing skin and soft tissue infections are Streptococcus pyogenes and Staphylococcus aureus, but other microbes are encountered as well. Necrotizing infection may be caused by a mixed infection.
Necrotizing fasciitis may originate from a minor laceration of the skin or without laceration of the skin. Underlying diseases (especially diabetes) may predispose to the infection. Often, however, there are no risk factors in the background.
Signs and symptoms
Leucocytosis, increased CRP concentration, fever
The symptoms of cellulitis include redness and heat of the skin as well as pain. The clinical picture resembles that of erysipelas, but the reddened skin area has more poorly defined borders than in erysipelas.
The symptoms of necrotizing fasciitis include a rapid onset of swelling, redness and very severe pain. The clinical picture is often septic.
Fever is common, but can sometimes be absent.
The clinical picture is often consistent with critical illness, and features of septic shock may be present already in the initial stage.
The skin may blister and discolour to a purplish red. The skin manifestations may be misleadingly slight or completely absent. The subcutaneous tissue becomes gangrenous.
Signs of septic complications are often already seen in the initial blood tests: increased creatinine and aminotransferase concentrations, thrombocytopenia. Creatine kinase (CK) if often increased due to tissue necrosis.
In gas gangrene, the necrotic wound becomes swollen and painful with palpable crepitus.
The most important treatment of necrotizing skin and soft tissue infection is urgent surgical debridement. All infected tissue and the overlying skin must be removed.
Empirical treatment is often started with a broad spectrum, e.g. by using carbapenems or piperacillin-tazobactam in combination with clindamycin. Treatment may become targeted based on microbiological findings.
The significance of hyperbaric oxygen therapy Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) as an adjunct to other treatment is unclear. Possible transportation to hyperbaric oxygen therapy site must not delay radical surgical treatment.
The status of intravenous immunoglobulin therapy (IVIG) is unclear.
Prevention
Appropriate treatment of skin lacerations
References
Stevens DL, Bryant AE. Necrotizing Soft-Tissue Infections. N Engl J Med 2017;377(23):2253-2265. [PubMed]