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Table 1. Therapeutic approach to common bacterial skin infections .

Infection Likely pathogens Management
Impetigo Staphylococcus aureus
Streptococcus pyogenes
Mild or localised disease:
wash crusts
topical mupirocin
Multiple lesions or recurrent disease:
cultures to guide treatment
oral antibiotics (dicloxacillin/cephalexin/trimethoprim plus sulfamethoxazole) for up to 10 days
intravenous antibiotics if no improvement
for recurrent infection due to S. aureus consider decolonisation
Advice and education of household members to reduce transmission:
avoid contact with lesions
wash hands regularly, particularly after touching lesions
Boils and carbuncles S. aureus
S. pyogenes
Incision and drainage most important step in management:
culture and susceptibility testing for lesions
antibiotics if spreading cellulitis or systemic symptoms oral dicloxacillin/cephalexin for 5 days
oral clindamycin, or trimethoprim plus sulfamethoxazole for community-acquired-MRSA for 5 days
Folliculitis S. aureus
S. pyogenes
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Treatment usually supportive
Warm compresses or topical mupirocin
In severe infection treat as per impetigo
Cellulitis and erysipelas S. aureus
Beta-haemolytic streptococci
Examine for predisposing factors
Consider unusual exposures (see Table 2) – broaden antibiotic therapy if this is the case
Culture and susceptibility testing for lesions, tissue or blood
Elevate limb
Treat underlying predisposing skin infection e.g. tinea
Mild disease:
oral dicloxacillin/cephalexin/clindamycin for 5–10 days
oral phenoxymethylpenicillin if culture is positive or clinical presentation of S. pyogenes
Severe disease or systemic features:
intravenous flucloxacillin/cephazolin/vancomycin
Consider decolonisation or prophylactic antibiotics with recurrent disease
Periorbital cellulitis S. aureus
Streptococcus species
Haemophilus influenzae type b (in unvaccinated patients)
Mild disease:
oral dicloxacillin/cephalexin/clindamycin for 7 days
If suspect H. influenzae type b infection (unvaccinated, < 5yrs old):
oral amoxycillin plus clavulanate, or cefuroxime for 7 days
Severe disease or systemic features:
treat as orbital cellulitis
Orbital cellulitis S. aureus
Streptococcus species
H. influenzae type b (in unvaccinated patients)
Anaerobic bacteria
Inpatient hospital management with urgent surgical opinion
Blood cultures and CT scan of orbits
Intravenous antibiotics
Necrotising fasciitis S. aureus
S. pyogenes
Gram negatives, Clostridium species
Anaerobic bacteria
Inpatient hospital management with urgent surgical debridement
Culture and susceptibility testing of tissue
Broad-spectrum intravenous antibiotics including clindamycin (antitoxin effect by suppressing synthesis of bacterial endotoxins)

MRSA methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus