Ulcer bed infection

We report a case of ulcer bed infection in an enlarging venous leg ulcer without clinical signs of cellulitis in the surrounding tissues. Signs of infection in the leg ulcer were: 1) cocci‐like structures and bacteria‐like rods around vessel walls in the viable ulcer bed, 2) vasculitis‐like inflamma...

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Published inAPMIS : acta pathologica, microbiologica et immunologica Scandinavica Vol. 106; no. 7-12; pp. 721 - 726
Main Authors DANIELSEN, LIS, BALSLEV, EVA, DÖRING, GERD, HØIBY, NIELS, MADSEN, SØREN MUNK, ÅGREN, MAGNUS, THOMSEN, HENRIK KLEM, FOS, HENRIK H. STEEN, WESTH, HENRIK
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.07.1998
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Summary:We report a case of ulcer bed infection in an enlarging venous leg ulcer without clinical signs of cellulitis in the surrounding tissues. Signs of infection in the leg ulcer were: 1) cocci‐like structures and bacteria‐like rods around vessel walls in the viable ulcer bed, 2) vasculitis‐like inflammation of deeply situated vessels of the viable tissue, 3) Pseudomonas aeruginosa‐specific antibodies in the serum (other than against exotoxin A), 4) extensive epidermolysis of normal human skin by the wound exudate in vitro, and 5) P. aeruginosa exotoxin A in the wound exudate (23 ng/ml). In an in vitro cell assay, the wound exudate was cytotoxic and rabbit antibodies to exotoxin A, but not a serine proteinase inhibitor, inhibited this cytotoxicity. P. aeruginosa exotoxin A might contribute to the pathogenesis of the ulcer enlargement. The ulcer improved after the third skin graft, probably mainly due to effective treatment with a long‐stretch compression bandage.
Bibliography:ark:/67375/WNG-QKDJLQQD-2
istex:99C25EA57BC41D9FEDF8DB9C4036554668E820B9
ArticleID:APM721
ISSN:0903-4641
1600-0463
DOI:10.1111/j.1699-0463.1998.tb00218.x