View clinical trials related to Cellulitis.
Filter by:Initiating early compression therapy in the treatment of lower limb cellulitis for adults admitted to the acute hospital to improve patient outcomes - a pilot study Cellulitis is a skin infection that results in oedema (additional fluid within tissues), erythema (redness) and variable levels of skin damage. Patients generally present with malaise, pain and if a lower limb is affected they have difficulty mobilising and weight bearing. Patients within this organisation are often referred to the tissue viability service only after significant skin damage has occurred (even thought they are receiving appropriate antibiotic therapy). At this point they will be offered an established plan of care that includes compression therapy if it can be tolerated however at present less than 50% of those being admitted are referred. Despite compression therapy being well proven in oedema management there is no data available to support or reject the early application in lower limb cellulitis. There is also a lack of information about the impact of early intervention in quality of life for patients in this specific group. This study has been developed in order to determine the feasibility of being able to undertake a wider trial which would evaluate the outcomes of patients with acute lower limb cellulitis treated with compression therapy versus standard care. The objectives of the study would be to test the procedures and data collection tools being considered for use in a wider study. This would include collection of quality outcome questionnaires, limb circumference measurements and photography as well as recruitment of participants, the follow up processes and participant attrition. Secondary objectives would be linked to quality of life outcome measures and would determine oedema reduction (and its impact on quality of life), the average number of beddays compared to a historical cohort and to determine recurrence within the study period.
This pre-post study, designed to decrease unnecessary antibiotic prescribing, will use a prospective cohort of patients presenting to the Pediatric Emergency Department (PED). Patients with local skin findings that the clinician believes are primarily due to an insect bite or sting will be approached for the study. The intervention will occur at the physician level. Midway through the study, physicians will receive an educational intervention describing how to differentiate cellulitis from allergic reaction using point-of-care bedside ultrasound. The main outcome observed will be whether or not the patient receives a prescription for antibiotics at the index visit.
More than 40% of patients presenting with acute bacterial skin and skin structure infection (ABSSSI) to the Barnes-Jewish Hospital (BJH) emergency department (ED) are admitted for intravenous antibiotics. There is growing evidence to suggest that many hospital admissions for uncomplicated ABSSSI due to Gram-positive bacteria could be avoided with an alternative treatment strategy employing newer long-acting antibiotics. Coupled with close outpatient follow-up, such an alternative hospital avoidance strategy has the potential to improve quality and value of care for patients with uncomplicated ABSSSI and optimize use of limited inpatient healthcare resources.
The aim of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of addition of corticosteroid therapy to antibiotic treatment during the first 48 hours of admission to the hospital in patients with cellulitis and its impact in the duration of the stay.
Cellulitis is among the most common infections leading to hospitalization, yet the optimal duration of therapy remains ill defined. Pragmatically, Dutch guidelines advise 10-14 days of antibiotics, which is the current standard of care. Recently it has been shown that antibiotic treatment for pneumonia and urinary tract infections can safely and significantly be shortened. Importantly, in an outpatient setting, treatment of uncomplicated cellulitis with 5 days of antibiotics was as effective as 10 days. We hypothesize that there is no difference in outcomes when patients hospitalized with cellulitis are treated with either a short-course (6 days) or standard-course (12 days) of antibiotics.
Skin and soft tissue infections represent a tremendous burden to the health care community with over 11.6 million ambulatory patients presenting annually in 2003 and 14.2 million in 2005. A Cochrane review of cellulitis found that there is limited data to support any specific antibiotic or even a specific length of antibiotic therapy, and that outpatient therapy for cellulitis is increasing. Soft tissue ultrasound has been shown to have utility in differentiating cellulitis from abscess but its role in patients with cellulitis is not well developed. Although speculative, the investigators hypothesize that sonographic features of cellulitis are associated with clinical improvement and successful therapy following antibiotics for patients with cellulitis.