TREATMENT
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
Airway compromise possible with deep extension of facial or neck cellulitis
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- General principles:
- Consider local prevalence of resistant pathogens in addition to usual causes
- In simple cellulitis, periorbital cellulitis, and diabetic patients, need to include CA-MRSA coverage in empiric therapy
- Usual outpatient treatment: 7–10 days
- Cool compresses for comfort
- Analgesics
- Extremity elevation
- Treat predisposing tinea pedis with topical antifungal such as clotrimazole
- Simple cellulitis:
- Outpatient:
- Oral Cephalexin + TMP/SMX (to cover CA-MRSA)
- Alternatives to cephalexin: Oral dicloxacillin, macrolide, or levofloxacin
- Alternatives to TMP/SMX: Clindamycin or Doxycycline
- Inpatient:
- IV nafcillin or equivalent, + IV vancomycin (to cover CA-MRSA)
- Extremity cellulitis after lymphatic disruption:
- Same as simple cellulitis
- Cellulitis in diabetics:
- Outpatient:
- Amoxicillin/clavulanate + TMP/SMX (to cover CA-MRSA), or clindamycin
- Inpatient:
- IV ampicillin/sulbactam or imipenem cilastatin or equivalent; + IV vancomycin (to cover CA-MRSA)
- Periorbital cellulitis in adults:
- Outpatient: Oral dicloxacillin or azithromycin; + TMP/SMX (to cover CA-MRSA)
- Inpatient: IV vancomycin
- Buccal cellulitis in adults:
- Outpatient: Oral amoxicillin/clavulanate
- Inpatient: IV ceftriaxone
- Odontogenic source:
- Drainage essential
- Coverage for anaerobes: Clindamycin
- Facial cellulitis in children:
- Perianal cellulitis:
- Outpatient: Oral penicillin VK
- Inpatient: IV penicillin G (aqueous)
- Animal or human bite:
- Oral amoxicillin/clavulanate
- Foot puncture wound:
- Oral or IV ciprofloxacin or IV ceftazidime
- MRSA:
- Nosocomial MRSA: IV vancomycin or oral or IV linezolid
- CA-MRSA:
- PO: TMP/SMX, clindamycin or doxycycline
- IV: Vancomycin or clindamycin
MEDICATION
- Amoxicillin/clavulanate: 500–875 mg (peds: 45 mg/kg/24h) PO BID or 250–500 mg (peds: 40 mg/kg/24h) PO TID
- Ampicillin/sulbactam: 1.5–3 g (peds: 100–300 mg/kg/24h up to 40 kg; over 40 kg give adult dose) IV q6h
- Azithromycin: (Adults and peds) 10 mg/kg up to 500 mg PO on day 1, followed by 5 mg/kg up to 250 mg PO daily on days 2–5
- Ceftazidime: 500–1,000 mg (peds: 150 mg/kg/24h; max. 6 g/24h; use sodium formulation in peds) IV q8h
- Ceftriaxone: 1–2 g (peds: 50–75 mg/kg/24h) IV daily
- Cephalexin: 500 mg (peds: 50–100 mg/kg/24h) PO QID
- Ciprofloxacin: (Adult only) 500–750 mg PO BID or 400 mg IV q8–12h
- Clindamycin: 450–900 mg (peds: 20–40 mg/kg/24h) PO or IV q6h
- Dicloxacillin: 125–500 mg (peds: 12.5–25 mg/kg/24h) PO q6h
- Doxycycline: 100 mg PO BID for adults
- Erythromycin base: (Adult) 250–500 mg PO QID
- Imipenem cilastatin: 500–1,000 mg (peds: 15–25 mg/kg) IV q6h; max. 4 g/24h or 50 mg/kg/24h, whichever is less
- Levofloxacin: (Adult only) 500–750 mg PO or IV daily
- Linezolid: 600 mg PO or IV q12h (peds: 30 mg/kg/24h div. q8h)
- Nafcillin: 1–2 g IV q4h (peds: 50–100 mg/kg/24h divided q6h); max. 12 g/24h
- Penicillin VK: 250–500 mg (peds: 25–50 mg/kg/24h) PO q6h
- Penicillin G (aqueous): 4 mU (peds: 100,000–400,000 U/kg/24h) IV q4h
- Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (TMP/SMX): 2 DS tabs PO q12h (peds: 6–10 mg/kg/24h TMP div. q12h)
- Vancomycin: 1 g IV q12h (peds: 10 mg/kg IV q6h; dosing adjustments required younger than age 5 yr); check serum levels
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Toxic appearing
- Tissue necrosis
- History of immune suppression
- Concurrent chronic medical illnesses
- Unable to take oral medications
- Unreliable patients
Discharge Criteria
- Mild infection in a nontoxic-appearing patient
- Able to take oral antibiotics
- No history of immune suppression or concurrent medical problems
- No hand or face involvement
- Has adequate follow-up within 24–48 hr
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
- Follow-up within 24–48 hr
- Sooner if worsening symptoms, including new or worsening lymphangitis, increasing area of redness, worsening fever
- Outline the border of erythema before discharge to aid in assessing response to therapy
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Strep and staph are most common causes
- CA-MRSA now significant cause of cellulitis, frequent enough to warrant including coverage in empiric treatment
- Clinicians not accurate at identifying MRSA at the bedside
- A deep abscess may be misclassified as cellulitis
- Use clinical suspicion and ultrasound to avoid missing an abscess
ADDITIONAL READING
- Abrahamian FM, Talan DA, Moran GJ. Management of skin and soft-tissue infections in the emergency department.
Infect Dis Clin North Am
. 2008;22:89–116.
- Gunderson CG. Cellulitis: Definition, etiology, and clinical features.
Am J Med.
2011;124:1113–1122.
- Liu C, Bayer A, Cosgrove SE, et al. Clinical practice guidelines by the Infectious Diseases Society of America for the treatment of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus infections in adults and children.
Clin Infect Dis.
2011;52:1–38.
- Pasternack MS, Swartz MN. Cellulitis, necrotizing fasciitis and subcutaneous tissue infections. In: Mandell GL, Bennett JE, Dolin R, eds.
Mandell, Douglas and Bennett’s Principles and Practice of Infectious Diseases
. 7th ed. New York, NY: Elsevier/Churchill Livingstone; 2010:1289–1312.
- Phoenix G, Das S, Joshi M. Diagnosis and management of cellulitis.
BMJ
. 2012;345:e4955.
- Swartz MN. Cellulitis.
New Engl J Med
. 2004;350:904–912.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
- Abscess, Skin/Soft Tissue
- Lymphadenitis
- Lymphangitis
- MRSA
- Necrotizing Fasciitis
CODES
ICD9
- 682.3 Cellulitis and abscess of upper arm and forearm
- 682.6 Cellulitis and abscess of leg, except foot
- 682.9 Cellulitis and abscess of unspecified sites
ICD10
- H05.019 Cellulitis of unspecified orbit
- L03.90 Cellulitis, unspecified
- L03.119 Cellulitis of unspecified part of limb
CENTRAL RETINAL ARTERY OCCLUSION
Yasuharu Okuda
•
Braden Hexom
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Obstruction of the central retinal artery associated with sudden painless loss of vision
- Usually occurs in persons 50–70 yr of age
- Ophthalmic artery is 1st branch of carotid.
- Risk factors include HTN, atherosclerotic disease, sickle cell disease, vasculitis, valvular heart disease, lupus, trauma, and coronary artery disease.
- Incidence of 1–10/100,000
- Often described as a “stroke of the eye”
ETIOLOGY
- Embolic:
- Occlusion by intravascular material from a proximal source:
- Atherosclerotic disease (majority)
- Carotid artery stenosis
- Valvular heart disease (cardiogenic emboli)
- Atrial myxoma
- Dissection of the ophthalmic artery
- Carotid artery dissection
- Thrombotic:
- Obstruction of flow from the rupture of a pre-existing intravascular atherosclerotic plaque
- Hypercoagulable states (sickle cell)
- Inflammatory:
- Due to temporal arteritis, lupus, vasculitis
- Arterial spasm:
- Associated with migraine headaches
- Decreased perfusion:
- Low-flow conditions such as in severe hypotension or high-pressure situations seen in acute angle-closure glaucoma or retrobulbar hemorrhage