Internal Medicine

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0521779407-C01 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 20:53


294 Cellulitis Cerebrovascular Disease & Stroke

■Diabetic/vascular insufficiency – dicloxacillin, cephalexin or clinda-
mycin; if hospitalized, Unasyn or Zosyn alone or with a fluoroqui-
nolone
■Human bites – Augmentin or, in the penicillin-allergic patient, clin-
damycin plus a fluoroquinolone; hospitalized – Unasyn or Zosyn;
clindamycin plus a fluoroquinolone if penicillin-allergic
■Dog/cat bites – same as human bites

follow-up
■Improvement in 48–72 h expected in uncomplicated cellulitis; if not
improved, consider osteomyelitis, abscess (especially IV drug user),
deep tissue infection or unusual organism
■Bites – assess every 24–48 hours until improvement; Pasteurella
infections slow to resolve (over weeks)
■Diabetes/vascular insufficiency – assess every 48–72 hours; cellulitis
improves in days; ulcer takes weeks to resolve

complications and prognosis
■Chronic recurrent cellulitis a rare complication associated with pre-
disposing conditions (tinea pedis, edema); treat underlying condi-
tion and consider prophylaxis with monthly benzathine penicillin
or daily oral penicillin or macrolide
■Bites – septic arthritis, osteomyelitis, sepsis (seen in asplenia, severe
liver disease) and endocarditis; prophylaxis indicated in high-risk
bites (cat and human bites, bites of the hand) and high-risk patients
(immunosuppressed, asplenic, cirrhosis); Augmentin for 5 days drug
of choice
■Diabetes/vascular insufficiency – localized disease successfully
treated in >90%; invasive disease results in amputation in up to 50%

Cerebrovascular Disease & Stroke........................


MICHAEL J. AMINOFF, MD, DSc
history & physical
■Sudden onset of focal motor or sensory deficit
■Altered consciousness common; coma may occur
■May be headache or seizures
■May be past history of TIA, amaurosis fugax, hypertension, diabetes
or other predisposing disorder
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