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Dermatologic Disorders
Bacterial Skin Infections
Cutaneous Abscess
Symptoms and Signs
Diagnosis
Treatment
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Cutaneous Abscess

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A cutaneous abscess is a localized collection of pus in the skin and may occur on any skin surface. Symptoms and signs are pain and a tender, firm or fluctuant swelling. Diagnosis is usually obvious by examination. Treatment is incision and drainage.

Bacteria causing cutaneous abscesses are typically indigenous to the skin of the involved area. For abscesses on the trunk, extremities, axillae, or head and neck, the most common organisms are Staphylococcus aureus and streptococci. In recent years, methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) has become a more common cause.

Abscesses in the perineal (ie, inguinal, vaginal, buttock, perirectal) region contain organisms found in the stool, commonly anaerobes or a combination of aerobes and anaerobes. Carbuncles and furuncles are follicle-based cutaneous abscesses with characteristic features (see Bacterial Skin Infections: Furuncles and Carbuncles).

Cutaneous abscesses tend to form in patients with bacterial overgrowth, antecedent trauma (particularly when a foreign body is present), or immunologic or circulatory compromise.

Symptoms and Signs

Cutaneous abscesses are painful, tender, indurated, and sometimes erythematous. They vary in size, typically 1 to 3 cm in length, but sometimes much larger. Initially the swelling is firm; later, as the abscess “points,” the overlying skin becomes thin and feels fluctuant. The abscess may then spontaneously drain. Local cellulitis, lymphangitis, regional lymphadenopathy, fever, and leukocytosis are variable accompanying features.

Diagnosis

  • Examination
  • Gram stain and culture to identify MRSA

Diagnosis is usually obvious by examination. Gram stain and culture are recommended, primarily to identify MRSA.

Conditions resembling simple cutaneous abscesses include hidradenitis suppurativa (see Bacterial Skin Infections: Hidradenitis Suppurativa) and ruptured epidermal cysts. Epidermal cysts (often incorrectly referred to as sebaceous cysts) rarely become infected; however, rupture releases keratin into the dermis, causing an exuberant inflammatory reaction sometimes clinically resembling infection. Culture of these ruptured cysts seldom reveals any bacteria. Perineal abscesses may represent cutaneous emergence of a deeper perirectal abscess or drainage from Crohn's disease via a fistulous tract. These other conditions are usually recognizable by history and rectal examination.

Treatment

  • Incision and drainage
  • Sometimes antibiotics

Some small abscesses resolve without treatment, coming to a point and draining. Warm compresses help accelerate the process. Incision and drainage are indicated when significant pain, tenderness, and swelling are present; it is unnecessary to await fluctuance. Under sterile conditions, local anethesia is given as either a lidocaineSome Trade Names
XYLOCAINE
Click for Drug Monograph
injection or a freezing spray.

Patients with large, extremely painful abscesses may benefit from IV sedation and analgesia during drainage. A single puncture with the tip of a scalpel is often sufficient to open the abscess. After the pus drains, the cavity should be bluntly probed with a gloved finger or curette to clear loculations, and then irrigated with 0.9% saline solution. Some clinicians pack the cavity loosely with a gauze wick that is removed 24 to 48 h later. Local heat and elevation may hasten resolution of inflammation.

Antibiotics are unnecessary unless the patient has signs of systemic infection, cellulitis, multiple abscesses, immunocompromise, or a facial abscess in the area drained by the cavernous sinus. In these cases, empiric therapy should be started with a drug active against MRSA (eg, trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazoleSome Trade Names
BACTRIM
SEPTRA
Click for Drug Monograph
, clindamycinSome Trade Names
CLEOCIN
Click for Drug Monograph
; for severe infection, vancomycinSome Trade Names
VANCOCIN
Click for Drug Monograph
) pending results of bacterial culture.

Last full review/revision October 2007 by A. Damian Dhar, MD, JD

Content last modified February 2012

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