Cases reported "Wound Infection"

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1/8. tongue piercing and its adverse effects.

    Piercing has become so popular during the last 20 to 30 years that many physicians are now treating patients with piercings and dealing with its side effects. We present 3 cases that illustrate the complications of tongue piercing (ie, infection, bleeding, and embedded ornaments). We describe the methods for inserting the ornaments to illustrate the possible adverse effects. Treatment recommendations and their application to those 3 patients are described.
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2/8. The influence of moisture wound healing on the incidence of bacterial infection and histological changes in healthy human skin after treatment of interactive dressings.

    In this article the authors discuss the problem faced by physicians when trying to use moisture-retentive dressing in pressure sores (decubitus ulcers). First, they report the results of an in vitro study using a new model of experimental wound (radio-isotopic investigation) that assesses the release of Ringer's solution from interactive dressings continually during fourteen hours. Second, they perform an animal experiment that assesses the incidence of wound infection in defects treated conventionally or using interactive dressings. The defects treated with interactive pads had lower incidence of wound infection, and the process of wound healing was rapid. Finally, the authors discuss their experience in four paraplegic patients with decubitus ulcers where they used moisture-retentive dressing on ulcers and on the surrounding intact skin before surgical procedure to detect the possibility of maceration of healthy skin. Histological evaluation was performed in order to find microscopically changes after moisture healing. The changes of healthy skin were not significant after treatment of moisture-retentive dressings.
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3/8. aeromonas hydrophilia infection in burn patients.

    aeromonas hydrophilia rarely infects burn wounds. Three cases of early A. hydrophilia burn wound infection, with one death, are reported. A history of extinguishing the fire with dirty water or by rolling in dirt should alert the physician to consider A. hydrophilia as a possible infection organism.
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4/8. Mechanical cornpicker hand injuries.

    The mechanical cornpicker causes tearing anse injuries from 1962 to 1975 were studied with regard to mechanism and extent ohe time of injury in 36% of hands, and in 73% of the remainder following treatmophylaxis, and antibiotics, and 73% hands required some form of delayed surgical treatment. Antibiotics did not appear to be helpful. Eighty-nine ps the most common cause given for farmers for their injuries. Excluding four pr permanently disabled patients, the average length of disability was 135 days. Eighty-nine per cent of patients experienced some permanent impairment of hand function. The mechanical cornpicker is described, and the importance of its proper use and physician's emphasis on accident prevention as well as treatment are stressed.
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5/8. Occult foreign bodies of the foot.

    This article illustrates several case reports of occult foreign bodies of the foot. The patients came for treatment from weeks to years after the inciting incident with chronic, sterile, draining wounds. The diagnosis of these foreign bodies can be quite difficult. Several radiographic and clinical clues are included, yet the single most valuable tool for the physician remains a high index of suspicion.
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6/8. Automotive airbag-induced second-degree chemical burn resulting in staphylococcus aureus infection.

    A young woman did not seek emergency treatment after a minor automobile collision as she thought that she had been spared serious injury by the inflation of the driver's-side airbag. She had a benign-looking erythema on her neck which, over the next several days, became a second-degree chemical burn infected with staphylococcus aureus. The burn and subsequent infection took several weeks to heal and the patient had to endure a prolonged course of antibiotics, nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs, and continued irrigation. This case exemplifies why alkali chemical burns from an automotive airbag should be treated aggressively, despite their benign appearance, as they may take several days to evolve. physicians should be warned that careful follow-up examination of patients seen in the hospital emergency department or in the physician's office is necessary to abate any hidden sequelae. Of course, the opportunity to decrease morbidity is lost if the patient does not seek emergency treatment.
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7/8. Overwhelming postsplenectomy sepsis in a patient with burns: a case report and a rational approach to treatment.

    Overwhelming postsplenectomy sepsis is a dreaded sequel of splenectomy. The rate of overwhelming sepsis in children after splenectomy for trauma is reported to be 10 to 30 times that of the general population. Episodes of pneumonia, septicemia, and meningitis in adults after a splenectomy are 166 times more common than in the general population. The care of a patient with burns and asplenia presents many unique management challenges to the burn physician. awareness of the development of overwhelming postsplenectomy sepsis and its most common infecting organisms is crucial. The specific immunologic deficiencies of reduced immunoglobulin production and cell-mediated immunity that exist in patients after a splenectomy may be compounded by burn injury. Specific treatment recommendations for patients with burns and asplenia are lacking. We report a fatal case of overwhelming sepsis in a patient with asplenia and with an 8% total body surface area partial-thickness burn, and we review the pathogenesis of overwhelming postsplenectomy sepsis. We focus on treatment recommendations regarding the use of prophylactic antimicrobials, intravenous immunoglobulin replacement therapy, and pneumococcal polyvalent vaccine to standardize the care of the patient with burns and asplenia and reduce infectious morbidity and deaths.
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8/8. candida parapsilosis infection in a rose thorn wound.

    candida parapsilosis should be recognized by primary care physicians as an important nosocomial pathogen, which is also frequently associated with sporadic skin and appendage infections. Its association with environmentally acquired skin ulcers can mimic fixed cutaneous sporotrichosis.
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