Cellulitis

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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

References

  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.