Urgencies and Emergencies of Ambulatory Infections · Cellulitis: Diagnosis and Management ......
Embed Size (px)
Transcript of Urgencies and Emergencies of Ambulatory Infections · Cellulitis: Diagnosis and Management ......

9/17/2020
1
Urgencies and Emergencies of
Ambulatory InfectionsHEATHER CHAMBERS, DNP, FNP-C, APRN-NP INFECTIOUS DISEASESIMMANUEL MEDICAL [email protected]
I have no relevant financial relationships to disclose
1
2

9/17/2020
2
Objectives
Describe skin and soft tissue infections Discuss respiratory infections Identify bone and joint infections
Skin and Soft Tissue Infections (SSTI)
3
4

9/17/2020
3
Cellulitis: A misunderstood diagnosis
Clinical diagnosis No labs or imaging will confirm the diagnosis
Consider alternative diagnoses Very itchy rash
Bilateral rash
Not improving with antibiotics
In a risky location (inner thigh, over a joint, genitals)
Extreme pain or totally painless
Lasts for months
Beware of diagnostic momentum
Hart A & Mehta S. Skin and soft tissue infections – Cellulitis, skin abscesses, and necrotizing fasciitis (April 2018). https://emergencymedicinecases.com/skin-soft-tissue-infections/
Cellulitis mimics Peripheral artery disease (PAD) Stasis dermatitis Erythema migrans of Lyme disease Deep vein thrombosis (DVT) Bee and wasp stings Monoarthritis Flexor tenosynovitis
5
6

9/17/2020
4
Cellulitis vs Mimics Cellulitis: Erythema, pain, warmth, swelling, chills, well demarcated,
unilateral Stasis dermatitis/PAD: red inflamed skin on lower legs, warm, non-
tender Lift the leg 45º for 1-2 minutes
DVT and cellulitis rarely co-exist Monoarthritis (septic arthritis/gout): significant pain on passive ROM Flexor tenosynovitis: Exquisite pain on passive ROM of finger Bee and wasp stings: cellulitis takes time to develop
Ask timing of incident Cellulitis is really uncommon
Erythema migrans: painless and nontender, seasonal
Hart A & Mehta S. Skin and soft tissue infections – Cellulitis, skin abscesses, and necrotizing fasciitis (April 2018). https://emergencymedicinecases.com/skin-soft-tissue-infections/
Cellulitis: Diagnosis and Management Predominant causes: Streptococcus spp and Staphylococcus aureus Blood cultures are positive in <10% of cases Wound or tissue cultures are negative in ~ 70% of cases Skin infections with purulent fluid associated with Staph aureus Animal bites or scratches
Pasteurella: Amp/Sulb or Augmentin (Levaquin covers but not DOC)
Capnocytophaga: PCNs, Augmentin, Cephalosporin, Carbopenems Variable susceptibility to Bactrim and Fluroquinolones
Salt water: Vibrio vulnificus (from shellfish): Doxycycline + Ceftriaxone Fresh water: Aeromonas spp: Ciprofloxain/Levofloxacin or Ceftriaxone
or Cefepime for severe wounds
Sullivan T & deBarra E. Diagnosis and management of cellulitis. 2018; 18 (2): 160-163.
7
8

9/17/2020
5
Erysipelas Caused by Strep pyogenes, Group A Strep
Less common: Staph aureus including MRSA
Most common in elderly Fiery red or salmon colored, well-demarcated edges Desquamation after 5-7 days Located on face or lower extremities Treatment
Penicillin 125-250mg po q6-8 hrs Amoxicillin 875mg po bid or 500mg po tid PCN Allergy: Clindamycin 300mg po tid
Duration: 5-10 days
Staph aureus (MSSA and MRSA) Furuncles = “Boils” Folliculitis Flea-”bitis” Treatment MSSA
Augmentin 875mg po bid Keflex 1gm po tid or 500mg po qid
Covers Strep as well
Treatment MRSA Clindamycin 300mg po tid Bactrim DS 1tab po bid Doxycycline/Minocycline 100mg po bid Linezolid 600mg po bid
9
10

9/17/2020
6
Coverage for Strep and MRSA SSTI
Clindamycin 300mg po tid Watch for C. diff!!
Bactrim with Amoxicillin Doxycycline/Minocycline with Amoxicillin Linezolid Delafloxacin (MRSA quinolone)
IV vs PO treatment Cephalexin has good bioavailability if covering MSSA and/or Strep
No difference in clinical resolution compared to Cephazolin Recommend IV antibiotics
Immunocompromised patients Signs of systemic infection (SIRS) Hemodynamic instability Altered mental status
Treatment failure or alternative diagnosis after 48-72hrs No improvement in pain No improvement in warmth Progression of erythema
Dalbavancin 1,500mg IV x1 Oritavancin (Orbactiv) 1,200mg IV x1
11
12

9/17/2020
7
Stanford Obesity Dosing
http://med.stanford.edu/bugsanddrugs/guidebook/_jcr_content/main/panel_builder_584648957/panel_0/download_1186887683/file.res/SHC%20Obesity%20Dosing%20Guide.pdf
Necrotizing fasciitis: Diagnosis Two types
Type 1: polymicrobial infection and is often gas-forming Type 2: monomicrobial, usually Group A Strep (GAS) causing a
robust immune stimulation
Manifestations Often pre-existing trauma Extremities, perineum, abdominal wall Rapid spread Crepitus Systemically ill
NF vs cellulitis: pain is out of proportion, crescendo pain, hypotension, necrosis, bullae
Best diagnosis is surgical evaluation
Puvanendran R, Huey JCM, & Pasupathy S. Necrotizing fasciitis. Canadian Family Physician October 2009; 55: 981-987.
13
14

9/17/2020
8
Necrotizing Fasciitis: Bugs & Drugs
Microbiology Monomicrobial
Strep pyogenes
MSSA and MRSA
Clostridia spp → gas gangrene
Others: Vibrio vulnificus, A. hydrophilia
Polymicrobial More common
Mixed aerobic/anaerobic organisms
Associated with GU/GI areas, penetrating trauma, IV drug use
Treatment Mortality 30-40% with treatment
Empiric antibiotics Pip/Tazo or Carbapenem + Vanco
+ Clindamycin
De-escalate based on cultures Strep spp: PCN + Clindamycin
MRSA: Vanco + Clindamycin
Clostridium: PCN + Clindamycin
Discharge antibiotics Augmentin
Guevel, LH & Shifrin MM. Necrotizing fasciitis in the adult patient: Implications for Nurse Practitioners. The Journal for Nurse Practitioners 2020; 16: 335-337.
Fournier’s Gangrene
Necrotizing fasciitis in genital region May be confined to scrotum, or also involve the perineum
and abdominal wall
Risk factors: DM, long-term alcohol misuse, trauma/surgery Polymicrobial Early aggressive surgical debridement
Thwaini A et al. Fourier’s gangrene and its emergency management. Postgrad Med J 2006; 82: 516-519
15
16

9/17/2020
9
Clinical Infectious Diseases, Volume 59, Issue 2, 15 July 2014, Pages e10–e52, https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciu296
Herpes Zoster Epidemiology Belongs to the α-herpesvirus family Primary infection leads to chickenpox Lifelong latency in cranial nerve and dorsal root ganglia Reactivation is shingles
Dermatomal distribution
Secondary complications Bacterial superinfection
Postherpetic neuralgia
Chronic neuropathic pain
Meningitis
Ocular complications
17
18

9/17/2020
10
Clinical Presentation
Infectious for about 48hours prior to onset of rash until all lesions are crusted
Cessation of new lesions occurs in about 3-5 days Complete lesion healing is 2-3 weeks Fever Malaise Nausea/vomiting Vesicular rash!
Herpes Zoster (Ophthalmicus)
Medical Emergency Needs IV Acyclovir Needs Lumbar puncture Needs ophthalmology consult Treatment
Acyclovir 10mg/kg IV q8hrs
Valgancyclovir (Valtrex) 1-2gms po tid
Acyclovir 800mg po 5x/day
19
20

9/17/2020
11
Herpes Zoster Prevention
Adult > 18 years: Shingrix Insurance coverage >50 years
2 injections 0, 2-6 months
Efficacy with Shingrix is 91% compared to 51% for Zostavax Revaccinate those who have received Zostavax Attenuated so can be given to immunosuppressed patients Can be given once lesions have crusted Shingrix more expensive for the vaccine but more cost effective
because more effective
Respiratory Infections
21
22

9/17/2020
12
Influenza Epidemiology
Person-to-person spread Close contact with infected person. Large droplets land on upper respiratory mucosal surfaces Virus replication in respiratory epithelium
Incubation – 1- 4 days
Viral shedding Can begin 1 day BEFORE the onset of symptoms Peak shedding first 3 days of illness: correlates with fever Subsides usually by 5-7 days Infected persons are reservoirs of influenza virus
Disease Transmission
Coughing Sneezing Talking (within 6 feet) Contaminated hands Contaminated objects Contagious 1 day before symptoms Viral shedding for 3-7 days
23
24

9/17/2020
13
Diagnosis & Treatment
Diagnosis Culture (3-7 days)
Swab for virus culture from nasopharynx or throat;
Nasal wash or bronchoscopy specimen
Rapid Influenza Tests (15 min) Throat swab Use within first 3 days of illness 50-70% sensitive for detecting
influenza but only 10-51% sensitive for H1N1
RVP (2-4 hours)
Treatment Rimantadine (Flumadine)
Can not use for H1N1
Resistance >95% **Don’t use**
Oseltamivir (Tamiflu) 75mg po bid x5days minimum Approved for >1yr old
Zanamivir (Relenza) 5mg each(2 inhalations) bid x5days Approved for >7 yrs old
Baloxavir 40mg po x1 (80mg if wt >80kg) Approved fro >12 yrs old
Peramivir 600mg IV x1 (CrCl >60) or qday if severe illness
Start within 48hrs of exposure If exposure occurs but no symptoms, start
prophylaxis(qday dosing x10days)
25
26

9/17/2020
14
Complications Pneumonia with/without bacterial
superinfection Other respiratory tract infections
Bronchiolitis Bronchitis
Otitis media Parotitis
Extrapulmonary Myositis/Rhabdomyolysis Mycocarditis Encephalitis
Toxic shock syndrome Post-Influenza Guillian-Barre
Immunosuppressed patients Longer viral replication Start therapy regardless of duration
of symptoms
Consider longer therapy in critically ill and immunosuppressed
Avoid use of corticosteroids Don’t give antibiotics if
uncomplicated Influenza Suspect bacterial pneumonia
Strep pneumoniae Group A Strep Staph aureus
27
28

9/17/2020
15
COVID
Kovalchick,J. How to prepare patients for the new influenza season during COVID-19 pandemic. Clinical Advisor, 2020 August 13. https://www.clinicaladvisor.com/home/topics/infectious-diseases-information-center/how-to-prepare-for-the-new-flu-season-during-covid-19/3/
29
30

9/17/2020
16
Solomon DA, Sherman AC, & Kanjilal S. Influenza in the COVID-19 Era. JAMA. Published online August 14, 2020. doi:10.1001/jama.2020.14661
Spread a virus
31
32

9/17/2020
17
Pneumocystis Pneumonia
Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia (PJP) Pneumocystic carini pneumonia (PCP) Develops in lungs with decreased immune system
Most common opportunistic infection with HIV infection (CD4 <200)
High doses of steroids or immunosuppressive drugs
Can cause severe respiratory failure with fevers and dry cough Symptoms: hypoxemia, SOB, +/- fevers CXR: diffuse bilateral infiltrates CT: Ground-glass opacities
33
34

9/17/2020
18
PJP vs Mimics
Bacterial Pneumonia
Fungal Pneumonia
Heart failure
Pulmonary edema
COVID-19
Diagnosis & TreatmentDiagnosis Need bronchoscopy
Sensitivity is 85-90%
Send cytology
PJP PCR
Serum Beta-D-glucan (Fungitell) Normally very high >500
Treatment Moderate-to-severe disease
TMP-SMX (Bactrim) 20mg/kg/day divided q6 or q8hrs x21 days (OR) Bactrim DS 2tabs po tid x21 days
Corticosteroids Pred 1mg/kg bid x 5 days, then 0.5mg/kg bid x 5
days, then 0.5mg/kg qday x 11 days
Mild-to-moderate disease TMP-SMX
Prevention High dose Bactrim 8mg/kg/day
TMP-SMX allergy Atovaquone 750mg po bid Clindamycin 600mg po q6hrs + Primaquine 15-
30mg po qday
35
36

9/17/2020
19
Prophylaxis
Who Qualifies? HIV with CD4 <200
Prednisone >20mg for > 1 month
Hematopoietic and solid organ transplants
Prevention Bactrim DS 1 tab po qday (OR) MWF
Bactrim SS 1 tab po qday
Pentamadine 300mg IH q4 weeks
Dapsone 100mg po bid Need to check G6PD
Atovaquone 1,500mg po qday
Community Acquired Pneumonia
“Typical” organisms Streptococcus pneumoniae (20-60%)
Haemophilus influenza (3-10%)
Moraxella catarrhalis
Staphylococcus aureus (3-5%)
“Atypical” organisms Mycoplasma pneumoniae
Chlamydophila pneumoniae
Legionella pneumophila
Strep pneumo
Mycoplasma
37
38

9/17/2020
20
Diagnosis Clinical evaluation
Fever, tachypnea, tachycardia, rales Sudden onset of fever +/- chills and rigors Pleuritic chest pain Cough, productive purulent sputum
CXR (not required in outpatient setting) Microbiological testing
CBC Sputum gram stain with culture Inflammatory markers (CRP, Procalcitonin) Pulse oximetry Urine for Legionella and Strep pneumo Ag RVP
Moberg AB, et al. Community-acquired pneumonia in primary care: clinical assessment and the usability of a chest radiography. Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care 2016; 34 (1): 21-27.
Day #4
39
40

9/17/2020
21
When to hospitalize
Minor Criteria Respiratory Rate >30
Multilobar infiltrates
Confusion/Disorientation
Uremia (BUN >20)
Leukopenia (WBC <4)
Thrombocytopenia (plts <100)
Hypothermia (temp <36ºC)
Hypotension
Major Criteria Septic shock with need for pressors
Respiratory failure requiring ventilation
Treatment
Outpatient No comorbidities or risk factors for
MRSA or Pseudomonas Amoxicillin Doxycycline No Macrolide
With comorbidities Combination therapy
Augmentin or cephalosporin + Doxycycline
Respiratory Quinolone Levofloxacin or Moxifloxacin
Inpatient Ceftriaxone
Cefepime if risk factors for Pseudomonas
+/- Doxycycline or Macrolide for atypical coverage
Respiratory Quinolone
Vancomycin if risk factors for MRSA or recent viral infection
41
42

9/17/2020
22
Bone and Joint Infections
Osteomyelitis
Definition: An acute or chronic inflammatory process of the bone and its structures secondary to infection with pyogenic organisms Hematogenous: bone infection seeded through remote source
Contiguous inoculation: infection spread from adjacent soft tissues/joints
Direct inoculation: infection with vascular insufficiency with multiple organisms
Bone exposed = bone infection (89% PPV) Treatment dependent on acute vs chronic
43
44

9/17/2020
23
Commonly isolated Organisms
Diagnosis
Laboratory data WBC usually <15
Elevated inflammatory markers (ESR/CRP)
Microbiologic data Essential for best antibiotic therapy
Culture: blood, bone biopsy, abscess drainage
Imaging Plain x-ray (changes delayed by >14 days)
CT
MRI
Hatzenbuehler J & Pulling TJ. Diagnosis and management of osteomyelitis. American Family Physician 2011; 84 (9): 1027-1033.
45
46

9/17/2020
24
General Principles of Therapy
Improve health status of patient and optimize underlying medical conditions Good nutrition-increase protein
Smoking cessation
Diabetes control
IV antibiotics Surgical management Treatment with IV x6 weeks +/- additional po antibiotics
“Give me the bug, and I’ll give you a drug”Microorganism First-line Antibiotic AlternativeMSSA Nafcillin or Oxacillin 2gms IV q4hrs Cefazolin 2gms IV q8hrsMRSA Vancomycin (trough 15-20) Linezolid 600mg IV/po bid (or)
Daptomycin 6mg/kg IV qday(or) Levofloxacin 750mg Iv/po+ Rifampin 600-900mg po qday
Streptococci (Penicillin sensitive)
Penicillin 4mU IV q6hrs (or) Ceftriaxone 2gm IV q24hrs (or) Cefazolin 2gm IV q8hrs
Vancomycin (trough 15-20)
Coagulase-negative Staph Vancomycin (trough 15-20) Linezolid 600mg IV/po bidPseudomonas Cefepime 2gm IV q12hrs Ciprofloxacin 750mg po bid
(or) Ceftazidime 2gm IV q8hrsEnterobacteriaceae Ceftriaxone 2gms IV q24hrs Ciprofloxacin 750mg po bidEnterococcus PCN 20mU IV con’t over 24hrs (or)
Ampicillin 12gms IV con’t over 24hrs
Vancomycin (trough 15-20) +/-Gentamicin
47
48

9/17/2020
25
Chronic Osteomyelitis
Typically no systemic symptoms May see sinus tract
Treatment Surgical debridement
Antimicrobials based on cultures
May not need any antibiotics
Prosthetic Joint Infections (PJI)
Significance: >1 million TKA and THA surgeries in U.S. each year Cost: $30,000 - $60,000 for each surgery Route: Local (60-80%) and Hematogenous (20-40%) Risk for infection:
Knee (1-2%)
Hip (0.3-1.3%)
Shoulder (<1%)
Higher risk Revision procedures (hip 3% and knees 6%)
Rheumatoid arthritis (2.2%) and osteoarthritis (1.2%)
49
50

9/17/2020
26
Risk Factors
Postoperative site infection or hematoma Complications with wound healing Prior joint arthroplasty with a large prosthesis Prior surgery or infection of the joint or adjacent bone Remote infections Rheumatoid arthritis Less common factors: Diabetes, chronic steroids, obesity, poor
nutrition, malignancy, sickle cell, prolonged preoperative hospitalization
Matthews PC, Berendt AR, & McNally MA. Diagnosis and management of prosthetic joint infection. BMJ 2009: 338: b1773.
Clinical Presentation
Early (<3 months after surgery) Acute onset of joint pain and effusion
Erythema, warm, and tender
Purulent drainage
Organisms: Staph aureus, Streptococci, Gram negatives
Delayed/Chronic (3-24 months after surgery Chronic pain and implant loosening
Worsens with time with decreased function
Organisms: Coagulase-negative Staphlococci, Propionibacterium acnes
Late (>24 months) Hematogenous seeding of
prosthesis
Organisms: variable
Staph aureus bloodstream infection with stable prosthesis with 34% rate of implant infection
Bloodstream infection can seed joint at any time after implantation
51
52

9/17/2020
27
Diagnosis
History &Physical important Type of prosthesis, date of
placement, problems with joint, symptoms, antibiotic history, infection history
Laboratory data ESR and CRP (CRP >13.5 is highly
sensitive/specific for PJI)
Blood cultures if has fevers
Radiology: not recommended by IDSA
Arthrocentesis Cell count, gram stain with culture,
crystals
Knee: WBC >1,700 or neutrophil >65%
Early post-op TKA: WBC >27,800 or neutrophil >89%
Hip: WBC >4,200 or neutrophil >80%
With osteoarthritis, WBC ,2,000 and neutrophil <50% have high PPV for absence of infection
Culture positive ~90% with PJI Keep off antibiotics for >14 days
prior to surgery
Osman DR et al. Diagnosis and management of prosthetic joint infection: Clinical practice guidelines by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. CID 2013; 56: e1-e25.Trampuz A et al. Sonication of removed hip and knee prosthesis for diagnosis of infection. N Engl J Med 2007; 357: 654-663.
Treatment
Obtain specimens for culture first (no preoperative antibiotics) Empiric therapy
Vancomycin + Cefepime or Pipercillin/Tazobactam, or Meropenem
Change antibiotics when pathogens are isolated with known susceptibilities
Course of 4-6 weeks of IV antibiotics or highly bioavailable oral antibiotic
May need chronic oral antibiotic suppression
53
54

9/17/2020
28
Septic Arthritis
Causes Hematogenously acquired (70%)
Inoculation from trauma, osteomyelitis, cellulitis, abscess, septic bursitis
Symptoms Typically monoarticular joint pain
Erythema and edema
Warmth
Pain on palpation
Sometimes fevers but can be afebrile
Organisms
Gram positive organisms (~75%) Staphlococci (56%)
Cause: Skin breakdown, cellulitis over site, recent surgery, damaged joint Joint function loss (27-46%)
Streptococci (16%) Cause: bacteremia (66%), polyarticular disease (32%) Risk: splenic dysfunction or splenectomy, DM, cirrhosis
Gram negative organisms (15%) Pseudomonas, E. coli, Proteus, Klebsiella
Risk: Immunosuppressed, GI disorders, IVDU, UTI (50%)
Other (12%)
Long B, Koyfmn A, & Gottlieb M. Evaluation and management of septic arthritis and its mimics in the Emergency Department. Western Journal of Emergency Medicine 2019; 20 (2): 331-341.
55
56

9/17/2020
29
Diagnosis & Treatment
Diagnosis Gold standard: Joint aspiration
WBC >50,000
Culture positive in ~80% of patients
Blood cultures (50-70% positive)
Treatment Surgery to wash out joint
Antibiotics 2-4 weeks S. aureus or GNRs: 4 weeks
Refer if joint aspiration is positive or unable to aspirate joint
Mimics
Gout Can predispose to septic arthritis Check for crystals in synovial fluid
Avascular necrosis Most common in hip Diagnosis by xray or MRI
Cellulitis Lyme disease
Early stages: red macule or papule that expands to form annular erythematous lesion
Late stages: monoarticular arthritis
Malignancy Most common in 10-14 year olds
Osteomyelitis Reactive arthritis
Inflammatory arthritis cause by a culture-proven infection at another site
UTI, GI, respiratory
Rheumatoid arthritis Pain in multiple joints Morning stiffness
Transient synovitis Self-limited, unknown etiology Most common in 3-8 year olds Hip pain, limping, refuse to bear weight
57
58