Cellulitis: Causes, Treatment, Types, Symptoms & Antibiotics (original) (raw)

Things to Know About Cellulitis

Illustration of bacterial skin infection that causes cellulitis.

Illustration of bacterial skin infection that causes cellulitis.

Cellulitis is a common infection of the skin and the soft tissues underneath the skin. Bacterial skin infections and soft tissue infections occur when bacteria invade broken or normal skin and start to spread under the skin and into the soft tissues. Infection results in inflammation, which is a process in which the body reacts to the bacteria. Inflammation may cause swelling, redness, pain, and/or warmth.

What Are Causes of Cellulitis?

A number of factors can increase the chance that bacteria may invade the skin and cause infection. These risk factors include the following:

What Are Symptoms and Signs of Cellulitis?

Cellulitis is defined as a syndrome of swelling of the skin and subcutaneous tissues, tenderness to touch, and redness of the skin with a diffuse border. It can occur in almost any part of the body.

On the head and face, the most common areas are the eye, eyelid, ear, and nose or nasal area.

Other common areas of cellulitis are the arm, hand, leg, ankle, and foot. Most commonly, it occurs in areas that may have been damaged or are inflamed for other reasons, such as inflamed injuries, contaminated cuts, or areas with poor skin hygiene. Bad circulation from poor vein function or peripheral arterial disease is a common cause of cellulitis.

What Does Cellulitis Look Like?

The common symptoms and signs of cellulitis are as follows:

When Should Someone Seek Medical Care for Cellulitis?

Check the skin often. Cellulitis can worsen quickly. Call your doctor or go to an emergency room if you have any of the following signs or symptoms of cellulitis:

Go to the hospital's emergency department if you have any signs or symptoms of the following:

What Specialists Treat Cellulitis?

Most primary care doctors (including family practice doctors, internal medicine doctors, pediatricians, and geriatricians) or emergency-medicine doctors can treat cellulitis.

How Do Health Care Professionals Diagnose Cellulitis?

Most likely, the doctor will make the diagnosis from a medical history and physical examination.

What Are Cellulitis Treatments?

Are There Home Remedies for Cellulitis?

What Medications Treat Cellulitis?

Antibiotics are prescribed by mouth (oral) or by injections. Be sure to tell your health care provider about any reactions you may have had in the past to antibiotics. Several antibiotics may be prescribed for cellulitis, alone or combined, depending on the suspected bacteria and the seriousness of the infection. Common ones include

When Is Surgery Needed for Cellulitis?

What Follow-up Is Needed After Treatment of Cellulitis?

Once you leave the doctor's office, be sure to take all the antibiotics prescribed.

What Are Cellulitis Complications?

Severe cellulitis may cause the spread of bacteria into the bloodstream (sepsis, or blood poisoning), which can be life-threatening. There are some very serious complications that are fortunately very rare, but awareness can be lifesaving.

The infected soft tissue may die (gangrene). Very severe cellulitis and tissue death may rarely spread deep inside to the muscle (necrotizing fasciitis).

Cellulitis around the eye is serious.

External ear infections (swimmer's ear) in a person with diabetes may become cellulitis, with severe swelling of the external ear canal (malignant otitis externa). Malignant otitis externa may spread deep into the ear and the skull bone. This may cause permanent hearing loss. A diabetic with worsening external ear infection should seek urgent care. The diagnosis often requires a computed tomography (CT) scan to evaluate the skull around the ear. An ear, nose, and throat surgeon is often involved in treatment, but usually, it can be treated with antibiotics, and no surgery is needed.

The blood flow of the nose and upper lip drains back into the veins of the skull. Cellulitis around the nose may very rarely spread to cause infected blood clots in these veins (cavernous sinus thrombosis).

Is It Possible to Prevent Cellulitis?

What Is the Prognosis of Cellulitis?

Most people respond to the antibiotics in two to three days and begin to show improvement. In rare cases, cellulitis may progress to a serious illness by spreading through the bloodstream. Some forms of severe cellulitis may require surgery and leave a person with scarring. Rarely, cellulitis can be life-threatening.

Staph bacteria are a common cause of cellulitis.

Cellulitis Cause

Staphylococcus aureus

Almost any organ system can be infected by S. aureus. Most frequently, S. aureus strains first infect the skin and its structures (for example, sebaceous glands, hair follicles) or invade damaged skin (cuts, abrasions). Sometimes the infections are relatively limited (such as a sty, boil, furuncle, or carbuncle), but other times they may spread to other skin areas (causing cellulitis, folliculitis, or impetigo). Unfortunately, these bacteria can reach the bloodstream (bacteremia) and end up in many different body sites, causing infections (wound infections, abscesses, osteomyelitis, endocarditis, pneumonia) that may cause severe harm or even be fatal.

References

Al-Niaimi, F., and N. Cox. "Cellulitis and lymphoedema: a vicious cycle." Journal of Lymphoedema 4.2 (2009): 38-42.

Halilovic, J., B.H. Heintz, and J. Brown. "Risk factors for clinical failure in patients hospitalized with cellulitis and cutaneous abscess." J Infect 65.2 Aug. 2012: 128-134.

Harrington, John N. "Orbital Cellulitis." Medscape.com. Mar. 11, 2016. <http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/
1217858-overview>.

Mandell, Gerald L., John E. Bennett, and Raphael Dolin, eds. Mandell, Douglas, and Bennett's Principles and Practice of Infectious Diseases, 8th Edition. Philadelphia, PA: Churchill Livingstone Elsevier, 2015.

United States. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "Necrotizing Fasciitis: A Rare Disease, Especially for the Healthy." Apr. 17, 2015. <http://www.cdc.gov/
Features/NecrotizingFasciitis/index.html>.