Title: Skin and Soft Tissue Infections Bacterial and Fungal
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2Skin and Soft Tissue InfectionsBacterial and
Fungal
- Crystal Obering, Pharm.D., MBA
- Clinical Assistant Professor
- Clinical Pharmacist
- Veterans Affairs Medical Center
3Objectives
- Discuss the pathophysiology (including
responsible organisms) of select skin and soft
tissue infections (SSTI) and superficial fungal
infections (SFI) - Identify clinical features, contributing factors,
and diagnosing techniques used in patients with
SSTI and SFI - Identify goals and treatment options for patients
with SSTI and SFI - Understand the resistance patterns of common
organisms that cause SSTI
4Objectives
- Identify non-pharmacological interventions for
SSTI and SFI - Develop a pharmaceutical care plan using your
knowledge of proper medication selection, dosing,
duration of therapy, common side effects,
drug-drug interactions, monitoring parameters,
and follow up needed for a patient with a SSTI or
SFI - Understand possible complications if SSTI and SFI
are not properly treated
5Future Resources for You!!
- Practice Guidelines from the Infectious Diseases
Society of America http//www.journals.uchicago.e
du/IDSA/guidelines/ - The Sanford Guide Guide to Antimicrobial
Therapy - Yearly published
- Common causative bacteria
- Empiric antimicrobial therapy
- Dosing adjustments in special populations
- Drug-Drug interactions with antimicrobials
6Skin and Soft Tissue Infections
- Bacterial Infections
- Infected bite wounds
- Erysipelas
- Impetigo
- Folliculitis, etc.
- Cellulitis
- Diabetic foot
- Decubitus Ulcers/Pressure Sores
- Necrotizing
- Bone Infections
- Fungal Infections
- Vaginal candidiasis
- Oral candidiasis
- Mycotic Infections
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8Skin and Soft Tissue Infections
- Difficult to develop due to skins physical
shedding, barrier, low pH, normal flora, good
blood supply, and dry nature - Breakdown in host defense can result in infection
- Bacteria exposure, extra moisture, occlusion of
blood supply, skin damage
9Case Review
- S 43 y/o WM presents to same day care in a WC
with right shoe removed. - CC Cat bite to his right foot. States it
occurred 2 days ago. It has been painful, red,
and swollen since then. NKDA, No routine
medications, has not tried anything OTC, denies
any H/O DM. - OT 100 F, BP 132/84, HR 73, RR 18.
- PE Small punctate area on dosal base of right
foot that is weeping serrous/purulent exudate
with surrounding erythema and warmth that extends
up the foot to lateral ankle. Painful to lateral
aspect of right foot with palpation.
10Infected Bite Wounds
Dog, Cat, Human
50 of US population will be bitten during their
lifetime
11Infected Bite Wounds
- Dog bites
- 80 of all bite wounds
- Infection rates 3.2-45.8
- 2 groups
- 8-12 hrs after injury
- Wound care, tear wounds, rabies/tetanus treatment
- gt12 hrs after injury
- Symptoms of infection from puncture wound
12Infected Bite Wounds
- Cat bites
- 5-15 of all bite wounds
- Infection rates 30-50
- Management same as dog bite
- Human bites
- 5-10 of all bite wounds
- Infection rates 10-50
13Animal Bites Clinical
- Features
- Puncture wound
- Infection
- Pain at injury site
- Gray malodorous discharge
- Cellulitis spreading proximal
- Contributing factors
- Time to medical attention
- gt50 years old
14Animal Bites Pathophysiology
- Diagnostic Techniques
- Document cause of injury
- Immunization history of animal
- Patients tetanus immune status
- Wound cultures not helpful
- Causative Bacteria
- Polymicrobial 5 isolates
- Common
- Within 24 hrs Pasteurella
- 24-36 hrs staph, strep
- Other
- Aerobes (74-90) strep, S. aureus, Moraxella,
Neisseria - Anaerobes (41-49) Fusobacterium, Bacteroides,
Porphyromonas, Prevotella
15Animal Bites Treatment
- Goals
- Prevent infection
- Resolve infection and prevent complications
- Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions
- Wound care, elevation, immobilization
- Tetanus-Diphtheria toxoids and tetanus immune
globulin
16Animal Bites Treatment
- Prophylaxis
- Drug Options x 3-5 days
- Amoxicillin/clavulanate 875/125mg BID
- PCN VK 500mg TID
- Alternative TMP/SMX 160/800mg BID
- Drug Monitoring
- PCN VK rash
- Bactrim GI, rash, photosensitivity, Cr/BUN,
pregnancy
17Animal Bites Treatment
- Drug Options x 10-14 days
- Within 24 hrs
- Augmentin 875/125mg BID
- Severe PCN 1.2 mUnits q 4-6 hrs
- Alternative clindamycin 300mg BID
- 24-36 hrs
- Dicloxacillin 500mg QID
- Alternative Cefuroxime 500mg BID
18Animal Bites Treatment
- Drug Monitoring
- Augmentin AST/ALT, rash
- Clindamycin AST/ALT, Cr/BUN, diarrhea
- Dicloxacillin GI, rash
- Cefuroxime PT, Cr/BUN
19Animal Bites Complications
- Soft tissue infection
- Prophylaxis
- Rabies
- Tetanus
- Osteomyelitis
- Amputation
20Human Bites Clinical
- Features
- Self inflicted
- Hands sucking/biting nails
- Mouth/Lips
- Clenched-fist injuries
- 3rd/4th Metacarbophalangeal joint
- Blows to the mouth
- Pain, throbbing, swollen extremity
- Purulent discharge
- Decreased range of motion
21Human Bites Pathophysiology
- Diagnostic Technique
- Appearance
- Culture/Sensitivity
- Immunization status of biter
- Causative Bacteria
- Normal Flora
- S. aureus, Streptococcus, Eikenella corrodens,
Bacteroides, Peptostreptococcus
22Human Bites Treatment
- Goals
- Prevent infection
- Resolve infection and prevent complications
- Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions
- Wound care, elevation, immobilization
- Rabies, tetanus, HIV prophylaxis if needed
23Human Bites Treatment
- Prophylaxis x 3-5 days
- Drug Options
- Augmentin 875/125mg BID
- Alternative TCN 500mg QID
- Drug Monitoring
- Augmentin AST/ALT, rash
- TCN Pregnancy, AST/ALT, sun exposure
24Human Bites Treatment
- Drug Options x 7-14 days
- Empiric Augmentin 875/125mg BID
- Severe Ampicillin/sulbactam (Unasyn) 1.5mg q6hrs
- Alternative Clindamycin (FQ or TMP/SMX)
- Drug Monitoring
- Unasyn diarrhea, rash
- Clindamycin AST/ALT, Cr/BUN, diarrhea
- FQ Cr/BUN, rash, tendonitis, cardiac-QT, seizure
- TMP/SMX pregnancy, sun exposure, AST/ALT,
Cr/BUN
25Human Bites Complications
- Osteomyelitis
- Septic arthritis
- Tenosynovitis
- Loss of digit/hands
26Bites Follow-up/Dz Monitoring
- Resolution of symptoms of infection
- Vitals, WBC, cultures as indicated
- Edema, other signs of cellulitis
27Case Review
- S 43 y/o WM presents to same day care in a WC
with right shoe removed. - CC Cat bite to his right foot. States it
occurred 2 days ago. It has been painful, red,
and swollen since then. NKDA, No routine
medications, has not tried anything OTC, denies
any H/O DM. - OT 100 F, BP 132/84, HR 73, RR 18.
- PE Small punctate area on dosal base of right
foot that is weeping serrous/purulent exudate
with surrounding erythema and warmth that extends
up the foot to lateral ankle. Painful to lateral
aspect of right foot with palpation.
28Case Questions
- If you feel that additional information is
needed, please list the specific facts you need
below. You may list no more than 2 additional
facts. Any facts listed beyond this will not be
graded. - List and prioritize all of the patient problems
you have identified in this case. - State the short-term and long-term, time-specific
therapeutic goals. - Identify your recommended treatments. Include
both nonpharmaceutical and pharmaceutical
treatments you would initiate, change or continue
and justify.
29Case Questions
- If necessary, list no more than 4 patient
education points/issues that you would
communicate to the patient regarding the therapy
you have just recommended. - List the monitoring parameters you feel are
necessary to follow and the frequency at which
you would follow them. Discuss key parameters
which would cause you to intervene and/or change
your plan.
30Erysipelas
31Erysipelas Clinical
- St. Anthonys Fire
- Features
- Superficial cellulitis with extensive lymphatic
involvement - Bright, edematous, indurated, painful
- Sharply circumscribed plaque by elevated border
- Face and legs most common location
- Contributing factors
- Most frequent in infants, young children,
elderly, nephrotic syndrome - Environment aiding in inoculation
- Preexisting lymphatic obstruction or edema
- Small break in skin
32Erysipelas Pathophysiology
- Diagnostic Techniques
- Primarily based on appearance
- Can aspirate from edge of advancing lesion
- Causative Bacteria
- Group A streptococci (S. pyogenes)
- Less common S. aureus
33Erysipelas Treatment
- Goals
- Eradication of infection
- Drug Options
- Mild to Moderate Topical mupirocin or PenVK
250-500mg QID x 7-10 days - Serious IV Pen G 2-8 million units Qday
- Alternate Erythromycin 500mg Qday
- Drug Monitoring
- PCN WBC, vitals, rash
- Erythro EKG in high risk pts QT prolongation
34Erysipelas Complications
- Diabetics/Immunocompromised Pts
- May be caused by mixed bacterial infections
- Gram and enterococci
- Treat with IV cephalosporin
35Erysipelas Follow-up/Dz Monitoring
- Reassess 3-5 days
- Response is usually quite dramatic
- May worsen shortly after treatment as dying
organisms release toxins
36Impetigo
37Impetigo Clinical
- Features
- Superficial cellulitis, small fluid filled
vesicles - Rapidly develops into pus-filled blisters
- Ruptures and forms golden yellow crusts
- Face nose, mouth
- Contributing factors
- More common in children, eczema, DM2, dialysis
38Impetigo Clinical
- Environment aiding in inoculation
- Minor trauma/scratches/insect bites
- Hot humid weather
- Pruritis further spreads infection
- Highly communicable
39Impetigo Pathophysiology
- Diagnostic Techniques
- Appearance
- Skin swab if other household members infected
- Causative Bacteria
- Bullous S. aureus
- Non-bullous S. aureus or S. pyogenes
40Impetigo Treatment
- Goals
- Resolution of infection
- Minimize scaring
- Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions
- Soaking in soap and warm water
- Bath in antiseptic reduce normal flora
41Impetigo Treatment
- Drug Options 7-10 days
- Small area Topical ABX (Mupirocin) TID
- Dicloxacillin 125mg q6hrs
- Extensive Dicloxacillin 250 q 6hrs
- Cephalexin 500mg BID
- Drug Monitoring
- Mupirocin local irritation
- Dicloxacillin GI, skin rash
- Cephalexin pruritis
42Impetigo Complications
- Extensive cellulitis
- Scaring from lesions
43Impetigo Follow-up/Dz Monitoring
- May resolve spontaneously
- Re-evaluate in 3-5 days
- Vitals, WBC, cultures as indicated
- If no improvement, may add penicillin or
ampicillin to cover for strep infection
44Folliculitis
45Folliculitis Clinical
- Features
- Superficial infection of pilosebaceous follicles
- In areas of coarse hair scalp, neck, beard,
limbs - Crops of multiple small erythematous papules and
pustules around hair follicle - Contributing factors
- Prolonged ABX therapy
- Immunosuppression DM or HIV
46Folliculitis Clinical
- Environment aiding in inoculation
- Hot-tub, swimming pool, whirlpool water poorly
chlorinated - Sponges/bathtubs poorly cleaned
- Pruritic papules and pustules over area covered
by bathing suit - Non-infective due to physical or chemical
irritation
47Folliculitis Pathophysiology
- Diagnostic Techniques
- Appearance
- Swab from pustules
- Swabs of carriage sites (nares)
- Causative Bacteria
- Most Common S. aureus
- Gram (-) organisms Klebsiella, E. Coli, P.
mirabilis
48Folliculitis Treatment
- Goals
- Eradication of infection
- Prevent/minimize spread of infection
- Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions
- Warm saline compresses
- Antiseptic wash
- Shave in direction of hair rather than against
- Surgical incision if doesnt drain spontaneously
49Folliculitis Follow-up/Dz Monitoring
- Usually self-limiting resolves w/o treatment
- Vitals, WBC, cultures as indicated
- Treatment usually only needed for furuncles and
carbuncles
50Folliculitis Complications
- Progress to furuncles and carbuncles (boils)
- Furuncles areas of friction discrete, firm,
tender, red, nodule lesion - Carbuncles lesions coalesce and extend into SQ
tissue - Fever, chills, and malaise
- Destruction of follicles and alopecia
- Secondary bacteremia in other tissues
- Generalized cellulitis
51Carbuncle
52Folliculitis Treatment
- Drug Options 7-10 days
- Mild Topical ABX (erythromycin, mupirocin) TID
- Severe Dicloxacillin 250mg q6hrs
- Cephalexin 500mg BID
- Alternative Bactrim DD BID or
Clindamycin 150-300mg qday-q6hrs - Drug Monitoring
- Mupirocin local irritation
- Dicloxacillin GI, skin rash
- Cephalexin pruritis
- Bactrim rash, GI
- Clindamycin AST/ALT, Cr/BUN, diarrhea
53Case Review Continued
- S Pt comes hopping on 1 foot (carrying
crutches) into the ER 5 days following initial
assessment. Reports that he has been taking the
previously prescribed ABX, but that his foot
looks worse. He reports that he has had sweats
but did not check his temperature. Describes
pain as 7 and constant, throbbing. - O RLE is erythematous and shiny/tight to lower
calf. Has ½ cm open ulcer on right dorsal area
with pus-like drainage that is fluctuant 3cm.
X-ray of right foot shows no air in soft tissue. - T 98.5, BP 135/80, P 73, RR 18
- WBC 13.1, Plt 183, Neut 79.2, Lymp 5.4,
Mono 14.3, Eos 0.9, Baso 0.2. - Culture Gram stain 2 WBC, 1 Gram cocci,
100 S. aureus, MRSA
54Cellulitis
55Cellulitis Clinical
- Features
- Ill-defined erythema, edema, warmth
- Pain and tenderness
- Blister, exudate, lymphangitis
- Systemic fever, rigors, malaise, confusion
- Frequent in legs
56Cellulitis Clinical
- Contributing factors
- Elderly
- Gain access through broken skin
- Infective Risks pressure ulcers, injection drug
- Non-Infective Risks lymphedema, leg edema,
venous insufficiency, obesity
57Cellulitis Pathophysiology
- Diagnostic Techniques
- Skin swabs often negative
- Needle aspiration
- Blood cultures complicated/severe cases
- Differential DVT ultrasound
- Causative Bacteria
- Group A streptococci S. pyogenes
- S. aureus
58Cellulitis Treatment
- Goals
- Rapid eradication of infection
- Prevention of complications
- Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions
- Elevation
- Immobilization of involved area to decrease edema
- Moist dressing
- Surgical intervention
59Cellulitis Treatment
- Drug Options x 7-10 days
- Guided by cultures/sensitivities
- Empiric Dicloxacillin 500mg QID or
- Cefazolin 1gm IV QID
- Alternative Macrolide or 1st Gen. cephalosporin
- Severe IV PCN-G 1-2 mUnits Q6hrs
- Alternative Vanco added, macrolides, Linezolid,
quinupristin/dalfopristin
60Cellulitis - Treatment
- Drug Monitoring
- Dicloxacillin GI, skin rash
- Cefazolin seizures, rash
- Erythromycin EKG in high risk pts QT
prolongation - PCN G rash
- Vancomycin levels, ototoxicity, Cr/BUN, rash
61Cellulitis Complications
- Spread through lymphatic tissue and bloodstream
- Bacteremia 30 of cases
- Thrombophlebitis
- Local abscess
- Osteomyelitis
- Septic arthritis
- Gangrene
- Amputation
62Cellulitis Follow-up/Dz Monitoring
- Symptom improvement within 48 hrs
- Vitals, WBC, cultures as indicated
- Identify focus of infection
- Obtain culture if indicated
- Appearance of crepitus
- Prophylaxis questionable
- 30 previous cellulitis
63Case Review Continued
- S Pt comes hopping on 1 foot (carrying
crutches) into the ER 5 days following initial
assessment. Reports that he has been taking the
previously prescribed ABX, but that his foot
looks worse. He reports that he has had sweats
but did not check his temperature. Describes
pain as 7 and constant, throbbing. - O RLE is erythematous and shiny/tight to lower
calf. Has ½ cm open ulcer on right dorsal area
with pus-like drainage that is fluctuant 3cm.
X-ray of right foot shows no air in soft tissue. - T 98.5, BP 135/80, P 73, RR 18
- WBC 13.1, Plt 183, Neut 79.2, Lymp 5.4,
Mono 14.3, Eos 0.9, Baso 0.2. - Culture Gram stain 2 WBC, 1 Gram cocci,
100 S. aureus, MRSA - PATIENT IS ADMITTED.
64Case Questions
- If you feel that additional information is
needed, please list the specific facts you need
below. You may list no more than 2 additional
facts. Any facts listed beyond this will not be
graded. - List and prioritize all of the patient problems
you have identified in this case. - State the short-term and long-term, time-specific
therapeutic goals. - Identify your recommended treatments. Include
both nonpharmaceutical and pharmaceutical
treatments you would initiate, change or continue
and justify.
65Case Questions
- If necessary, list no more than 4 patient
education points/issues that you would
communicate to the patient regarding the therapy
you have just recommended. - List the monitoring parameters you feel are
necessary to follow and the frequency at which
you would follow them. Discuss key parameters
which would cause you to intervene and/or change
your plan.
66Case Review
- S A 43 y/o AAF with a recent history of a
diabetic foot infection presents to wound clinic
for follow-up. She is noted to have had
draining, macerated tissue with minimal
devitalization. Currently denies any
fever/chills/night sweat/nausea/vomitting.
Extensive debridement is preformed and the
patient is admitted for IV ABX. - O She was previously treated with 11 days IV
ceftriaxone and 10 days PO metronidazole. - Cultures E. faecalis, S. aureus, Morganella
sp., S. pneumonia, bacteroides sp.
67DiabeticFoot Processes
68Diabetic Foot Processes
- Most common complication of diabetes
- Account for 1 in 5 hospitalizations
- Affect 25- of the 12 million diabetics
- Over 50 of all non-traumatic lower extremity
amputations - Generally preventable
69Diabetic Foot Clinical
- Features
- Common on pad, heel, and metacarpals
- Chemical vs. mechanical
- Size/Depth of ulcer
- Odor, exudate
- Undermining
- Neuropathic
- Neuroischemic most common
- Ischemic rare
70Diabetic Foot Clinical
- Contributing factors
- Age
- Chronic renal disease
- Blindness
- Duration/Control of DM
- Prior ulcers
71Diabetic Foot Clinical
- Environment aiding in inoculation
- Combination of various pathologies and
environmental factors - Neuropathy
- Peripheral vascular disease
- Abnormalities in pressures
- Trauma
- Presence of callus, edema, food deformities
72Diabetic Foot - Clinical
- Diagnostic grading of ulcer
- 0 at-risk foot, no ulcer, callus formation
- 1 superficial ulcer not infected
- 2 deeper ulcer often infected
- 3 deep ulcer, abscess formation, bone
involvement - 4 partial gangrene of foot (heel or toe)
- 5 Gangrene of whole foot
- Diagnostic staging of wound
- A clean wound
- B nonischemic infected wound
- C ischemic non-infected wound
- D Ischemic, infected wound
73Diabetic Foot Infection Clinical
- Non-Limb Threatening
- Limb Threatening
- gt 2cm cellulitis, lymphangitis, soft-tissue
necrosis, fluctuant, odor, gangrene,
osteomyelitis - Life Threatening
- Septic situation deferred
74Diabetic Foot Infection Clinical
- Diagnostic Tests
- ESR, WBC, cultures
- X-ray to determine bone involvement
- Renal function, glycemic control
- Fever
- Causative Bacteria
- Polymicrobial
- S. aureus, Group B strep, enterococci,
Corynebacterium, Bacteroides
75Diabetic Foot Infection Treatment
- Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions
- PREVENTION, PREVENTION, PREVENTION!!
- Podiatric care
- Protective shoes
- Pressure reduction
- Prophylactic surgery
- Preventative Education
- Surgery/Amputation
- Debridement chemical, surgical
76Diabetic Foot Infection Treatment
- Drug Options
- Non-Limb Threatening x 10 days
- PO AMX/CL 875mg BID
- Alt Levofloxacin 500mg Qday Metronidazole
- IV Ampicillin/Sulbactam (Unasyn) 1.5-3g q6h or
Piperacillin/Tazobactam (Zosyn) 3.375g q6h - Limb Threatening IV broad spectrum
- Imipenem 0.5g q6h Vanco
- Alt Vancomycin 15mg/kg q12h Levofloxacin 500mg
Qday Metronidazole 500mg q6h
77Diabetic Foot Infection Treatment
- Drug Monitoring
- Augmentin - AST/ALT, rash
- Levofloxacin Cr/BUN, rash, tendinitis,
cardiac-QT, seizure - Unasyn/Zosyn diarrhea, rash
- Primaxin seizure, PCN allergy
- Vancomycin levels, ototoxicity, Cr/BUN, rash
- Metronidazole Cr/BUN, leukopenia, seizure
78Diabetic Foot Infection Complications
- Lymphangitis
- Cellulitis
- Necrosis
- Gangrene
- Osteomyelitis
- Amputations
79Diabetic Foot Infection F/U, Dz Monitoring
- Reassess in 48-72 hrs
- Vitals, WBC, cultures as indicated
- Reduction of pressure elevation of limb
- Frequent foot exams self and clinical
- Appearance of crepitus
80Case Review
- S A 43 y/o AAF with a recent history of a
diabetic foot infection presents to wound clinic
for follow-up. She is noted to have had
draining, macerated tissue with minimal
devitalization. Currently denies any
fever/chills/night sweat/nausea/vomitting.
Extensive debridement is preformed and the
patient is admitted. - O She was previously treated with 11 days IV
ceftriaxone and 10 days PO metronidazole. - Cultures E. faecalis, S. aureus, Morganella
sp., S. pneumonia, bacteroides sp. - Grade 2, Stage D
81Case Questions
- If you feel that additional information is
needed, please list the specific facts you need
below. You may list no more than 2 additional
facts. Any facts listed beyond this will not be
graded. - List and prioritize all of the patient problems
you have identified in this case. - State the short-term and long-term, time-specific
therapeutic goals. - Identify your recommended treatments. Include
both nonpharmaceutical and pharmaceutical
treatments you would initiate, change or continue
and justify.
82Case Questions
- If necessary, list no more than 4 patient
education points/issues that you would
communicate to the patient regarding the therapy
you have just recommended. - List the monitoring parameters you feel are
necessary to follow and the frequency at which
you would follow them. Discuss key parameters
which would cause you to intervene and/or change
your plan.
83Case Review
- 80 y/o bed bound, WM who presents today for
routine 6 mo follow up. Continues Foley
catheter, last changed 2 weeks ago. No current
complaints of burning, hematuria, or pain around
Foley - SH Married, lives with wife who cares for him,
has VN that helps with bowel/bladder needs and
bathing. - PE T 96.5, BP 142/73, P 58, RR 18. Derm
small stage 2 decubiti, noted in the sacral
region axilla are involved, R gt L. Poor skin
turgor, skin dry, cracked, thin. Bony prominences
protruding. Obvious eating deficits.
84Case Review, cont
- PMH DM2 Neuropathy HTN CAD-CVAx3 w/ residual
L side weakness Prostate CA GERD neurogenic
bladder urethral stricture. - Labs WNL. Wound Swab Neg
- Meds NPH Insulin 18 Units Qam 8 Qpm Gabapentin
300mg TID Atenolol 50mg Qday Furosemide 40mg
Qday Lisinopril 40mg Qday ASA 81mg Qday
Simvastatin 10mg PHs Omeprazole 20mg Qday MVI.
85Pressure Ulcers
86Pressure Ulcers Clinical
- AKA pressure sores, bed sores, decubitus ulcers
- Prevalence
- 2.5-24 in LTC facilities
- 70 of affected are 70 years
- 50 increase in nursing time
- Contributing factors
- Alterations in sensation or response to
discomfort - Alterations in mobility
- Significant changes in weight
- Incontinence
87Pressure Ulcers Clinical
- Environment
- Pressure bony prominences
- Shear forces elevated HOB
- Friction skin against bed, chair, clothing
- Moisture incontinence
- Affected areas
- Girdle area (ischium, sacrum, coccyx,
trochanters) - Heels
88Pressure Ulcer Classifications
- Stage 1Non-blanchable erythema of intact skin,
or discoloration, edema, induration, and warmth
over a bony prominence among patients with darker
skin the heralding lesion of skin ulceration.
89Pressure Ulcer Classifications
- Stage 2Partial thickness skin loss involving
epidermis, dermis, or both. The ulcer is
superficial and presents clinically as an
abrasion, blister, or shallow crater.
90Pressure Ulcer Classifications
- Stage 3Full thickness skin loss involving
damage to, or necrosis of, subcutaneous tissue
that may extend down to, but not through, fascia.
The ulcer presents clinically as a deep crater
with or without undermining of adjacent tissue.
91Pressure Ulcer Classifications
- Stage 4Full thickness skin loss with extensive
destruction, tissue necrosis or damage to muscle,
bone, or supporting structures (e.g., tendon,
joint capsule). Undermining and sinus tracts also
may be associated with Stage 4 pressure ulcers
92Pressure Ulcers Treatment
- Goals
- PREVENTION, PREVENTION, PREVENTION!
- Promote wound healing
- Minimize effect on pts overall condition
93Pressure Ulcers Non- Pharm Treatment
- Prevention
- Maintain personal hygiene
- Adequate nutrition and hydration
- Evaluate and manage incontinence
- Relief of 5 min q 2 hrs can prevent sore
formation - Approximately 29-79 min of nursing time per day
- Pressure-relieving devices foam pads, inflating
mattresses, sheep skins, not donut shaped devised - Body placement in bed and handling
94Pressure Ulcers Non- Pharm Treatment
- Debridement surgical, chemical
- Cleansing
- Proper wound care
- Hyperbaric Oxygenation
95Pressure Ulcers Pathophysiology
- Infection Diagnostic Criteria
- Appearance suggestive of infection
- All wounds are colonized to some degree
- Redness, heat, pain
- Odor, purulent drainage, advancing inflammation
gt1cm - Culture from biopsy or needle aspiration
96Managing Ulcer Colonization and Local and
Systemic Infection
97Pressure Ulcers Pathophysiology
- Causative Bacteria
- Become infected as they worsen
- Polymicrobotic
- S. pyogenes, enterococci, anaerobic strep.,
Enterobacteria, Pseudomonas, Bacteroides, S.
aureus
98Pressure Ulcer Treatment
- Drug Options x 3-4 weeks
- Initial Topical Antibiotic (silver sulfadiazine
or Triple ABX) - Severe Imipenem/Cilastatin 0.5g q 8hr
- If MRSA add Vancomycin
- Drug Monitoring
- Topical irritation
- Primaxin seizure, PCN allergy
- Vancomycin levels, ototoxicity, Cr/BUN, rash
99Pressure Ulcer Complications
- Cellulitis
- Osteomyelitis
- Necrotizing Fasciitis
- Myositis
- Amputation
- Bacteremia
- Sepsis
- Death
100Pressure Ulcer F/U, Dz Monitoring
- Preventative measures
- Universal precautions
- Cover wound except during treatment
- Pain control
- WBC, X-ray, ESR
- Treat most contaminated ulcer last
101Case Review
- 80 y/o bed bound, WM who presents today for
routine 6 mo follow up. Continues Foley
catheter, last changed 2 weeks ago. No current
complaints of burning, hematuria, or pain around
Foley - SH Married, lives with wife who cares for him,
has VN that helps with bowel/bladder needs and
bathing. - PE T 96.5, BP 142/73, P 58, RR 18. Derm
small stage 2 decubiti, noted in the sacral
region axilla are involved, R gt L. Poor skin
turgor, skin dry, cracked, thin. Bony prominences
protruding. Obvious eating deficits.
102Case Review, cont
- PMH DM2 Neuropathy HTN CAD-CVAx3 w/ residual
L side weakness Prostate CA GERD neurogenic
bladder urethral stricture. - Labs WNL. Wound Swab Neg
- Meds NPH Insulin 18 Units Qam 8 Qpm Gabapentin
300mg TID Atenolol 50mg Qday Furosemide 40mg
Qday Lisinopril 40mg Qday ASA 81mg Qday
Simvastatin 10mg Qhs Omeprazole 20mg Qday MVI.
103Case Questions
- If you feel that additional information is
needed, please list the specific facts you need
below. You may list no more than 2 additional
facts. Any facts listed beyond this will not be
graded. - List and prioritize all of the patient problems
you have identified in this case. - State the short-term and long-term, time-specific
therapeutic goals. - Identify your recommended treatments. Include
both nonpharmaceutical and pharmaceutical
treatments you would initiate, change or continue
and justify.
104Case Questions
- If necessary, list no more than 4 patient
education points/issues that you would
communicate to the patient regarding the therapy
you have just recommended. - List the monitoring parameters you feel are
necessary to follow and the frequency at which
you would follow them. Discuss key parameters
which would cause you to intervene and/or change
your plan.
105Necrotizing Infections
106Necrotizing Infections Clinical
- Features
- Pain
- Skin appearance hot, swollen, erythematous, w/o
sharp margins - Etiologic agent
- Gas production
- Muscle involvement
- Systemic toxicity
- Frequent in the abdomen, perineum, and lower
extremities - Very rare
107Necrotizing Infections Treatment
- Goals
- Identification, immediate aggressive surgical
debridement and resolution of infection - Diagnostic Tests
- Presentation/Appearance
- X-ray to see if gaseous production
- Causative Bacteria
- Faciitis anaerobes, strep, enterobacteria
- Post surgery/trauma (Gas Gangrene) Clostridium
perfingens
108Necrotizing Infections Treatment
- Non-Pharmaceutical
- Surgery
- Drug Options
- Clindamycin IV 900mg q8h
- Primaxin IV 0.5g q6hrs
- Drug Monitoring
- As before
109Necrotizing Infections Complications, F/U, Dz
Monitoring
- Advances rapidly ICU monitoring
110(No Transcript)
111Bone Infections
- Osteomyelitis
- Hematogenous vs. Continguous
- Acute vs. Chronic
- Staging anatomic location and physiologic status
of patient - Infectious Arthritis
112Osteomyelitis Clinical
- Direct entry from source outside of the body
- Penetrating wound, fractures, surgical
- Secondary to SSTI fingers and toes
- Abscessed teeth
- Most common in gt50 yo
- Contributing Factors
- Hip fracture
- Diabetes Mellitus
- Severe atherosclerosis
- Age 50-70
113Osteomyelitis Pathophysiology
- Diagnostic Tests
- Vitals, CBC, blood culture
- X-ray/bone scan of area
- Bone aspiration and culture
- Causative Micro-organism
- Varies based on source
- Most common S. aureus, poly-microbial
114Ostseomyelitis Treatment
- Goals
- Prevent!!!
- Resolution of infection and prevention of chronic
infection - Acute best outcome
- Chronic surgical debridement and prolonged ABX
115Osteomyelitis Treatment
- High dose
- Usually 4-6 weeks
- Guided by cultures and sensitivities
- Use for oral, outpatient ABX
- Confirmed osteomyelitis
- Organism identified
- ABX sensitivity determined
- Suitable agent available
- Assured compliance
- Not diabetic or have PVD
116Osteomyelitis Treatment
- Drug Options x 4-6weeks
- Oral AM/CL 875mg BID
- Ciprofloxacin 750mg BID
- Nafcillin 2g IV q4hrs Ceftazidime 2g IV q8hrs
- Alternative Zosyn
- Guided by cultures and sensitivities
117Osteomyelitis Complications, F/U, Dz Monitoring
- Complications
- Vascular surgery
- Surgical debridement
- Amputation
- Disease Monitoring/Follow-up
- CBC 1-2 q week until normal
- ESR weekly
- Clinical signs daily
- Adherence
118Fungal Infections
- Vaginal candidiasis
- Oral candidiasis
- Mycotic Infections
119Vaginal Candidiasis Clinical
- Features
- Symptoms vulvar itching, soreness, irritation,
burning - Signs erythema, discharge, lesions, edema
- Contributing Factors
- Sexually active, vaginal contraceptive agents,
ABX use - Environment aiding in inoculation
- Douching, tight fitting clothing
120Vaginal Candidiasis Pathophysiology
- Diagnostic Criteria
- Clinical presentation
- Vaginal pH normal
- Microscopy blastospores
- Culture usually not required
- Causative
- Candida albicans
- C. glabrata
121Vaginal Candidiasis Treatment
- Goals
- Treat symptoms
- Non-Pharmacological Intervention
- Diet
- Avoid harsh soaps, douching
- Cool baths
- Loose fitting clothing
122Vaginal Candidiasis Treatment
- Drug Options
- Topical Clotrimazole 1 1 app x 7 days
- 2 1 app x 3 days
- 10 1 app x 1 day
- Oral Fluconazole 150mg x 1 day
- Drug Monitoring
- For 1 day treatment, allow 72 hr for symptom
resolution - Local irritation of topical
123Vaginal Candidiasis Complications
- Complicated by DM or other immunosuppressed pts
- Treatment continued x 10-14 days
- Pregnancy
- Oral agents contraindicated
- Topical preferred x 10-14 days
124Vaginal Candidiasis F/U, Dz monitoring
- Recurrent infections
- 4 episodes w/in 12-mo period
- Regular induction Tx x 14 days
- Negative cultures
- Maintenance Tx
- Fluconazole 100mg q week x 6 mo
125Oral Candidiasis Clinical
- Features
- Diverse presentation
- Symptoms Painful mouth, burning tongue, metallic
taste, speech difficulty, dysphasia - Signs lesions on buccal mucosa, throat, tongue,
gums - Contributing Factors
- Broad-spectrum ABX use, steroid inhalers, smoker,
denture wearer, immunocompromised
126Oral Candidiasis Pathophysiology
- Diagnostic Criteria
- Clinical appearance
- Cytology, culture, biopsy
- Candida in normal flora
- Causative
- Candida albicans
- Other Candida glabrata, tropicalis, krusei,
parapsilosis
127Oral Candidiasis Treatment
- Goals
- Eliminate clinical signs/symptoms
- Minimize future relapses
- Non-Pharmacological Intervention
- Proper oral hygiene
- Minimize contributing factors (CS, ABX, Chemo)
128Oral Candidiasis Treatment
- Drug options
- Local/Regional treatment
- Nystatin 500,000 units sw/sw QID x 14 days
- Clotrimazole 10mg troche QID x 7-14 days
- Systemic
- Fluconazole 200mg x 1 day
129Oral Candidiasis Treatment
- Drug Monitoring
- For 1 day treatment, allow 72 hr for symptom
resolution - Local Tx Complete course even though symptoms
resolve - Local irritation of topical
130Oral Candidiasis Complications, F/U, Dz
monitoring
- Refractory infections
- Higher rate in immunocompromised pts
- Reduction/resolution of symptoms
- Negative culture
131Mycotic Infections
132Mycotic Infections Clinical
- Features
- Skin Central clearing surrounded by advancing
red, scaly, elevated boarder - Nail chalky, dull, yellow/white, brittle,
crumbly - Diagnosis
- Microscopic exam
- Causative
- Dermatophytes Trichophyton, Epidermophyton,
Microsporum
133Onychomycosis Treatment
- Goal
- Resolution of infection
- Drug Options
- Topical Ciclopirox lacquer Qhs x 48 wks
- Oral Terbinafine 250mg Qday x 6wks (finger)
x 12wks (toe) - Monitoring
- Adherence
- GI, rash, headache, AST/ALT
- CYP2D6 interactions
134Onychomycosis Complications, F/U, Dz Monitoring
- Infect other nails
- Adherence to regimen
- May take 3-12 months for new nail to grow out
135Objectives
- Discuss the pathophysiology (including
responsible organisms) of select skin and soft
tissue infections (SSTI) and superficial fungal
infections (SFI) - Identify clinical features, contributing factors,
and diagnosing techniques used in patients with
SSTI and SFI - Identify goals and treatment options for patients
with SSTI and SFI - Understand the resistance patterns of common
organisms that cause SSTI
136Objectives
- Identify non-pharmacological interventions for
SSTI and SFI - Develop a pharmaceutical care plan using your
knowledge of proper medication selection, dosing,
duration of therapy, common side effects,
drug-drug interactions, monitoring parameters,
and follow up needed for a patient with a SSTI or
SFI - Understand possible complications if SSTI and SFI
are not properly treated