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54 Year Old Male with Left Leg Pain and SOB Ninad A. Shroff, MD. 54 Year Old Male with Left Leg Pain and SOB. 09:25: Arrival via BLS unit Seen previous day in the ED for left thigh pain after exercise and diagnosed with a musculoskeletal injury
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54 Year Old Male with Left Leg Pain and SOBNinad A. Shroff, MD
54 Year Old Male with Left Leg Pain and SOB • 09:25: Arrival via BLS unit • Seen previous day in the ED for left thigh pain after exercise and diagnosed with a musculoskeletal injury • Shortness of breath began few hours prior to arrival • No chest pain
54 Year Old Male with Left Leg Pain and SOB • Past Medical History • Hypertension • Peptic Ulcer Disease • Unclear liver disease • Medications • Propranolol • Furosemide • Amiloride • Acetaminophen • Percocet
54 Year Old Male with Left Leg Pain and SOB • Initial Physical Exam • T: 97.0 BP: 122/82 P: 116 R: 33 Pox: 89% • Patient in mild respiratory distress • Lungs: Clear • Heart: Regular, tachycardia • MSK: Left thigh swollen with some ecchymosis and a 4cm x 4cm area of erythema with some bullae. Neurovascularly intact
54 Year Old Male with Left Leg Pain and SOB • Initial Differential Diagnosis • DVT/PE • CHF/Cardiac • Infectious • Sepsis
54 Year Old Male with Left Leg Pain and SOB • Initial Orders • EKG • Labs • Chest x-ray • Left lower extremity doppler US
54 Year Old Male with Left Leg Pain and SOB • CXR: NAD • Initial bedside doppler US done by ED resident showed (+) DVT • 9:50 AM: Subcutaneous enoxaparin and Ct angiogram of the chest ordered
54 Year Old Male with Left Leg Pain and SOB • 10:18 • BP: 106/67 P: 116 R: 34 Pox: 90% on 100% • 11:10 • Ct angiogram chest (-) for PE • Vital signs remained the same • Leg wound larger in size • Surgery called
54 Year Old Male with Left Leg Pain and SOB • Lab Results • CBC • Wbc: 10.7 • Hgb: 17.8 • Platelets: 156 • Diff: 22 segs, 66 bands, 8 lymphs • Coags • PT: 23.0 • INR: 1.9 • PTT: 31.0
54 Year Old Male with Left Leg Pain and SOB • Lab Results • Electrolytes • Na: 139 • K+: 5.4 • Cl: 111 • Co2: 11 • BUN: 38 • CR: 2.1 • Ca: 7.2 (nl range 8.4-10.2)
54 Year Old Male with Left Leg Pain and SOB • 11:14 • Left femur x-ray ordered • 11:30 • Patient respiratory distress worsened requiring endotracheal intubation • Ceftriaxone, vancomycin, and clindamycin ordered
54 Year Old Male with Left Leg Pain and SOB • 12:15 • Official bedside US confirmed DVT • Surgery at bedside • Patient dropped BP to 59/27 • Central line placed and norepinephrine begun in addition to ongoing fluid resusucitation • Left leg wound continues to enlarge • OR preparations being made
54 Year Old Male with Left Leg Pain and SOB • 13:15 • Attending surgeon performs bedside debridement of leg wound revealing significant necrotic tissue • Hypotension persists. Dopamine started • 14:00 • Patient into temporary junctional rhythm and hypoglycemia
54 Year Old Male with Left Leg Pain and SOB • 14:10 • Cardiopulmonary arrest with successful resuscitation • 14:25 • Transferred to the OR • Shortly thereafter, patient went into arrest again and passed away
54 Year Old Male with Left Leg Pain and SOBTimeline • PTA: Previous day ED visit for left leg pain • 09:25: Arrival • 11:10: Surgery consultation • 11:30: Endotracheal intubation • 12:15: Pressors begun • 13:15: Bedside debridement • 14:10: Cardiopulmonary arrest • 14:25: Transfer to OR; Death
54 Year Old Male with Left Leg Pain and SOBPostmortem • Culture results • Wound and blood cultures • All positive for Strep pyogenes Group A • Additional history • Patient had visited his pmd prior to his initial ER visit and had received an “injection” into his left hip/thigh area for pain
Necrotizing Fasciitis • Progressive, rapidly spreading, inflammatory infection within the deep fascia, with secondary necrosis of the subcutaneous tissue
Necrotizing Fasciitis • Descriptions of the disease date back to the days of Hippocrates (400 BC) • First described in medical literature by Dr. Frank Meleny in 1924
Necrotizing Fasciitis • Previously known as strep gangrene, phagedena, phagedenic gangraenosa, necrotizing subcutaneous infection, suppurative fasciitis • In 1952, the term necrotizing fasciitis 1st published in literature
Necrotizing Fasciitis • Mortality extremely high • Up to 25% • 70% in cases presenting with sepsis or renal failure
Necrotizing Fasciitis • Risk Factors • Local tissue trauma with subsequent bacterial invasion • Local ischemia • Reduced host defenses
Necrotizing Fasciitis • Other Predisposing Factors • Skin biopsy • Needle puncture sites • Frostbite • Chronic venous leg ulcers • Open bone fractures • Insect bites • Surgical wounds • Abscesses
Necrotizing Fasciitis • Other Predisposing Factors • Systemic illness • Predisposes to local tissue ischemia and hypoxia • Diabetes, cancer • Alcoholism • Immunosuppression • Idiopathic/Spontaneous • 50% of cases?
Necrotizing Fasciitis • Other Predisposing Factors • Pediatric considerations • Omphalitis and circumcision • Surgery or trauma • Varicella • Congenital or acquired immunodeficiencies
Necrotizing FasciitisClinical Course • Tends to begin with constitutional symptoms such as fever and chills and is often mistaken as viral in etiology • Soreness in the affected part of the body may be present early
Necrotizing FasciitisClinical Course • 24-48 hours later, erythema followed by vesicles and/or bullae over affected area • Pain may be out of proportion to clinical findings • Anesthesia in affected area may be a sign of thrombosis of local subcutaneous blood vessels
Necrotizing FasciitisClinical Course • Without treatment, deeper muscular layers become involved with resultant myositis or myonecrosis • Rapid progression to systemic infection, sepsis and death
Necrotizing FasciitisClassification • Type 1 • Polymicrobial • Usually after trauma or surgery • Anaerobic and facultative bacteria in synergy • May be mistaken for simple cellulitis externally, but with significant underlying necrosis
Necrotizing FasciitisClassification • Type 1 • Example of bacteria involved include S. aureus, Bacteriodes • Prevotella species usually found in NF of the mouth, jaw, neck, and/or face • Pseudomonas species in extremely immune-compromised patients
Necrotizing FasciitisClassification • Type 1 • Type 1 variant caused by a minor skin wound contaminated by saltwater containing Vibrio vulnificus • Soft tissue necrotizing infection at location of the wound • Those with liver and/or blood disease at higher risk of this infection
Necrotizing FasciitisClassification • Type 1 • Fournier’s gangrene
Necrotizing FasciitisFournier’s Gangrene • Rapidly progressing polymicrobial necrotizing fasciitis of the perineum • Usually genitourinary, rectal or penile/scrotal source
Necrotizing FasciitisForunier’s Gangrene- Risk Factors • Immune Compromise • Diabetes • Alcoholism • HIV • Cancer
Necrotizing FasciitisFournier’s Gangrene- Risk Factors • Hygiene • Homelessness • Paraplegia • Catheters • Nursing Home • Tinea cruris
Necrotizing FasciitisFournier’s Gangrene- Risk Factors • Surgical • Circumcision • Vasectomy • Orchiectomy • Hernia repair • Hemorrhoidectomy
Necrotizing FasciitisFournier’s Gangrene • Once bacteria break through skin barrier, rapid spread along the perineal fascial planes • Posteriorly and laterally, Colles’ fascia fuses with urogenital diaphragm • Anteriorly, Buck’s and Scarpa’s fascia allowing lateral extension and extension to the abdominal wall
Necrotizing FasciitisFournier’s Gangrene • Testicles usually spared • Toxic appearing • INAPPROPRIATE INDIFFERENCE • Mortality 10%- 50%
Necrotizing FasciitisClassification • Type 2 • Group A streptococcus • “Flesh-eating bacteria” • Gas usually not evident • 50% of cases in previously young and healthy patients • Varicella infection and use of NSAIDS are predisposing factors
Necrotizing FasciitisClassification • Type 3 • Clostridial myonecrosis • Usually Clostridium perfringens • If spontaneous, the C. septicum more likely, especially in association with leukemia or colon cancer • Gas gangrene
Necrotizing FasciitisDiagnosis • Diagnosis may be extremely difficult and may not be evident until late • CLINICAL SUSPICION the key • Pain out of proportion to exam • Toxic appearing
Necrotizing FasciitisDiagnosis • CBC with differential • Electrolytes • Calcium level • Extensive fat necrosis may cause hypocalcemia