| Gas gangrene |
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| Other names | Myonecrosis |
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| Person with gas gangrene. The patient had gone into shock. |
| Medical specialty | Infectious disease |
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Gas gangrene is a serious but rare form of bacterial infection that occurs when a pressure ulcer becomes infected with the clostridium bacteria.[1] It is a form of necrotizing myositis.
The bacteria thrive in environments where there is little or no oxygen (anaerobic). They produce gases and release dangerous toxin,[1] over tissues where there is gangrene. Symptoms of gas gangrene include severe pain and rapid swelling of the skin. Gas gangrene requires immediate treatment (it is a medical emergency). In the most serious of cases, it may be necessary perform surgery to amputate (debridement) on the affected body part to prevent the gangrene from spreading to the rest of the body.[1] It can cause sepsis.
Symptoms
There is quick onset of:[2]
- myonecrosis
- the supply of blood is cut off from the skeletal muscle and it dies (skeletal muscle infarct)
- muscle swelling
- gas production
- sepsis
- severe pain[1]
Risk factors include
Risk is increased in:[2]
- remove all dead tissue (eg amputation) (debridement)
Benzylpenicillin with or without clindamycin.
Hyperbaric oxygen can improve survival and lower the number of debridements.
Related pages
References
Bacterial skin disease |
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Gram- positive | | Bacillota | |
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| Actinomycetota | Mycobacterium- related |
- Aquarium granuloma
- Borderline lepromatous leprosy
- Borderline leprosy
- Borderline tuberculoid leprosy
- Buruli ulcer
- Erythema induratum
- Histoid leprosy
- Lepromatous leprosy
- Leprosy
- Lichen scrofulosorum
- Lupus vulgaris
- Miliary tuberculosis
- Mycobacterium avium–intracellulare complex infection
- Mycobacterium haemophilum infection
- Mycobacterium kansasii infection
- Papulonecrotic tuberculid
- Primary inoculation tuberculosis
- Rapid growing mycobacterium infection
- Scrofuloderma
- Tuberculosis cutis orificialis
- Tuberculosis verrucosa cutis
- Tuberculous cellulitis
- Tuberculous gumma
- Tuberculoid leprosy
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| Others |
- Cutaneous actinomycosis
- Nocardiosis
- Cutaneous diphtheria infection
- Arcanobacterium haemolyticum infection
- Group JK corynebacterium sepsis
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Gram- negative | | Pseudomonadota | | Alpha |
- Endemic typhus
- Epidemic typhus
- Scrub typhus
- North Asian tick typhus
- Queensland tick typhus
- Flying squirrel typhus
- Trench fever
- Bacillary angiomatosis
- African tick bite fever
- American tick bite fever
- Rickettsia aeschlimannii infection
- Rickettsialpox
- Rocky Mountain spotted fever
- Human granulocytotropic anaplasmosis
- Human monocytotropic ehrlichiosis
- Flea-borne spotted fever
- Japanese spotted fever
- Mediterranean spotted fever
- Flinders Island spotted fever
- Verruga peruana
- Brill–Zinsser disease
- Brucellosis
- Cat-scratch disease
- Oroya fever
- Ehrlichiosis ewingii infection
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| Beta |
- Gonococcemia/Gonorrhea/Primary gonococcal dermatitis
- Melioidosis
- Cutaneous Pasteurella hemolytica infection
- Meningococcemia
- Glanders
- Chromobacteriosis infection
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| Gamma | |
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| Campylobacterota | |
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| Other | |
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Unspecified pathogen |
- Folliculitis
- Superficial pustular folliculitis
- Sycosis vulgaris
- Pimple
- Ecthyma
- Pitted keratolysis
- Trichomycosis axillaris
- Necrotizing fasciitis
- Gangrene
- Chronic undermining burrowing ulcer
- Fournier gangrene
- Elephantiasis nostras
- Blistering distal dactylitis
- Botryomycosis
- Malakoplakia
- Pyomyositis
- Blastomycosis-like pyoderma
- Bullous impetigo
- Chronic lymphangitis
- Recurrent toxin-mediated perineal erythema
- Tick-borne lymphadenopathy
- Tropical ulcer
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