Cellulitis

Background

  • Acute non-purulent spreading infection of the subcutanous tissue, causing overlying skin inflammation
  • Most often caused by strep, staph, MRSA
  • H.flu is most common cause in the orbit.

Differential Diagnosis

General

Skin and Soft Tissue Infection

Look-A-Likes

Hand Infection

Hand and finger infections

Look-Alikes

Diagnosis

Cellulitis of the leg
  • Often accompanied by fever, chills, malaise, HA, vomiting
  • Rash
    • Local redness, heat, swelling
    • Warm tender indistinct margins. Pyrexia may signify systemic spread
  • Ultrasound can be helpful

Treatment

Predictors of Treatment Failure[1]=

  • Fever (T>38°C) at triage (odds ratio [OR] 4.3)
  • Chronic leg ulcers (OR 2.5
  • Chronic edema or lymphedema (OR 2.5)
  • Prior cellulitis in the same area (OR 2.1)
  • Cellulitis at a wound site (OR 1.9)

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


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


Pediatric Inpatient

Saltwater related cellulitis

Freshwater related cellulitis

See Also

Source

  • Tintinalli
  1. Peterson D. et al. Predictors of failure of empiric outpatient antibiotic therapy in emergency department patients with uncomplicated cellulitis. Acad Emerg Med. 2014 May;21(5):526-31.