View clinical trials related to Cellulitis of Leg.
Filter by:This study will evaluate the clinical efficacy and safety of radiofrequency heating and targeted pressure energy for reduction in the appearance or cellulite. The study is a prospective multi-center open-label single-arm study. Subjects will be required to complete four (4) treatment visits and two to three follow-up visits - 1, 3 and 6 months after the last therapy visit. All of the study subjects will receive the treatment with the subject device.
Cellulitis is an increasingly common and unpleasant bacterial infection of the skin, usually affecting the legs. Patients experience pain and swelling, loss of mobility, fever, and chills. Patients may be left with chronic skin damage and 1 in 5 experience recurrences. Cellulitis is treated with antibiotics, but it is unclear as to how long treatment should be for. As a result, many patients get much longer antibiotic treatment than needed. This exposes patients to the risks of taking unnecessary antibiotics. This study aims to find out what features of individual patients predict a good, sustained recovery from cellulitis. These may include medical conditions and clinical response to the first few days of antibiotic treatment, such as changes in skin temperature. Patients who are being treated in hospital for cellulitis will be invited to take part. Information will be collected about patients who will be followed up for 3-6 months. Devices for measuring skin temperature will also be compared to see which one works best. This information will be used to help develop a set of rules that doctors can use to guide the length of antibiotic treatment. This should ensure that future patients receive the amount of antibiotics needed and no more.
It can be difficult to differentiate cellulitis from non-infectious mimics, like venous stasis. One way of determining the difference is feeling skin surface temperature. However, this is a subjective measure that is inherently unreliable. It might be possible to objectify this measurement by using a non-contact infrared thermometer at the bedside. The goal of this study is therefore to assess whether objective difference in skin surface temperature in an area of suspected cellulitis, relative to non-affected skin, has diagnostic utility. It will use the diagnosis of cellulitis by an infectious diseases physician as the gold standard and compare blinded temperature difference between affected and unaffected limbs to that standard. It is hypothesized that measurement of skin surface temperature by non-contact infrared thermometer will help differentiate cellulitis from many non-infectious conditions that mimic cellulitis. For patients who are hospitalized, the study also plans to see whether a change in this temperature difference is predictive of response to treatment when compared to the FDA standard for early response and patient reported symptoms. This is a pragmatic, prospective cohort study. Patients with suspected cellulitis who receive an infectious diseases consult (in the emergency room or urgent clinic) will be approached for consent and enrollment. The goal is to enroll approximately 50 patients with a minimum of 10-15 cases of non-cellulitis. These measurements will not be made available to the treating teams. This is an observational study only comparing the potential value of these measurements to usual clinical care.