Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-10 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 7, 2007 18:40


824 Impetigo

■Annular and crusted lesions may be seen in syphilis. Serologic tests
(RPR, etc) can be performed.
■Crusted lesions may be seen with ecthyma or varicella.
management
What to Do First
■Assess percentage of body surface area involved.

General Measures
■Gentle cleansing with soap and water at least daily
■Larger or draining lesions may be covered with an absorptive dress-
ing.
specific therapy
■Localized (<1% BSA) will usually respond to topical therapy.
■Effective topical agents include mupirocin, bacitracin, polymyxin,
erythromycin and gramicidin.
■More extensive involvement will require oral antibiotics for 7–14
days.
■Staphylococcal disease should respond to dicloxacillin or a
cephalosporin (erythromycin resistance has become common).
follow-up
■If lesions continue to spread after 24–48 hours of therapy
■If fever or lymphadenopathy continue or develop after 24–48 hours
of therapy
■If signs or symptoms of glomerulonephritis develop
complications and prognosis
Complications
■Glomerulonephritis: uncommon, but is high (12–28%) following skin
infection with a nephritogenic strain of streptococcus
■More common in children
■Patients should be watched for signs of glomerulonephritis for at
least 7 weeks after cutaneous infection clears in endemic areas for
nephritogenic M strains of streptococci
■Scarring: uncommon, best prevention is early therapeutic interven-
tion

Prognosis
■Generally excellent, with complete recovery the rule
■Recurrence because of staph nasal carriage can occur
■Glomerulonephritis a rare complication
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