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==Background==
==Background==
*Life-threatening polymicrobial necrotizing fasciitis of perineum, genitalia, or perianal area.
*Necrotizing fasciitis of the perineum, genitalia, and/or perianal area
**Obliterative endarteritis of subcutaneous arterioles leads to gangrene of overlying skin<ref name="Shyam">Shyam DC, Rapsang AG. Fournier's gangrene. Surgeon. 2013 Aug;11(4):222-32. doi: 10.1016/j.surge.2013.02.001.</ref>
*A '''life-threatening surgical emergency''' with mortality 20-40%<ref name="eke">Eke N. Fournier's gangrene: a review of 1726 cases. ''Br J Surg''. 2000;87(6):718-728. PMID 10848848.</ref>
*Risk Factors
*Polymicrobial infection: aerobic + anaerobic organisms (E. coli, Bacteroides, Streptococcus, Clostridium, S. aureus)
**Diabetes mellitus (most common)
*Rapidly progressive — tissue destruction can advance centimeters per hour
**Hypertension
*Source: perianal (most common), urogenital, or cutaneous infection
**Alcoholism
 
**Advanced age
==Risk Factors==
**Para/Quadriplegic
*Diabetes mellitus (present in 40-60% of cases)
*M>F (10:1)<ref name="Shyam" />, (likely under-diagnosed in women<ref name="Concepts">Wróblewska M et al. Fournier's gangrene: current concepts. Pol J Microbiol. 2014;63(3):267-73.</ref>)
*Immunosuppression (HIV, malignancy, chemotherapy, transplant)
*Mortality - often cited as 20-40%, but up to 80% in some studies<ref name="Concepts" />
*Obesity
*Chronic alcohol use
*Peripheral vascular disease
*Perianal abscess, urethral stricture, urinary tract instrumentation
*Recent surgery or trauma to the perineum


==Clinical Features==
==Clinical Features==
*Initial event is usually local trauma or extension of a UTI or perianal infection<ref name="Shyam" />
*Severe perineal/genital pain (often out of proportion to examination findings early on)
**Gangrene develops over 2-7 days
*Erythema, edema, and tenderness of perineum/scrotum/vulva
*Marked pain, localized swelling, crepitus, ecchymosis to genital or perineal area.
*Rapid progression: skin changes from erythema → dusky → bullae → necrosis → gangrene
*Fever
*Crepitus on palpation (subcutaneous gas — pathognomonic but not always present)
*Malodorous purulent drainage
*Fever, tachycardia, systemic toxicity / [[Sepsis (main)|septic shock]]
*In late or severe cases, pt may present in septic shock
*Scrotal swelling with disproportionate pain
 
*May appear deceptively benign early in the course
==Differential Diagnosis==
{{Template:Testicular DDX}}
 
==Diagnosis==
'''Clinical diagnosis, based on history and physical exam'''


===Work-up===
==Evaluation==
*CBC
*'''Clinical diagnosis''' — do not delay surgical consultation for imaging
*CMP
*Labs: CBC (leukocytosis often >15,000), BMP, lactate, blood cultures, CRP
*CRP
*CT with contrast: subcutaneous gas, fascial thickening, fat stranding, abscess formation
*Lactate
**CT has high sensitivity (~90%) but should not delay surgery<ref name="levenson">Levenson RB, et al. Fournier gangrene: role of imaging. ''Radiographics''. 2008;28(2):519-528. PMID 18349455.</ref>
*Type and Screen
*LRINEC score may help risk-stratify (see [[LRINEC score calculator]])
*Wound Culture
*X-ray: may show subcutaneous emphysema
*Blood Cultures
*CT Abdomen/pelvis (only if diagnosis unclear or if requested by surgery/urology)


==Treatment==
==Management==
*Immediate surgery and urology consult for surgical debridement (gangrene can spread at rate of 2-3 cm/hr<ref name="Shyam" />)
*Emergent surgical debridement — the single most important intervention
*[[Antibiotics]] - Must cover [[gram positive]], [[gram negative]], and [[anaerobes]]
**Often requires multiple return trips to OR for serial debridement
**[[Vancomycin]] + ([[imipenem]] 1gm IV q24hr OR [[meropenem]] 500mg-1gm IV q8hr)
**Early surgery correlates with decreased mortality
*Aggressive supportive care, including fluid resuscitation (and [Vasopressors|pressors], if indicated)
*Broad-spectrum IV antibiotics
**Vancomycin (or Linezolid) +
**Piperacillin-tazobactam (or Meropenem) +
**Clindamycin (for toxin suppression and synergistic coverage)
*Aggressive IV fluid resuscitation and vasopressors for [[Septic shock|septic shock]]
*Tetanus prophylaxis
*Wound care: vacuum-assisted closure (VAC) after debridement
*Consider hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBO) as adjunct (limited evidence)


==Disposition==
==Disposition==
*Admit to ICU
*ICU admission with emergent surgical consultation
*Urology and/or general surgery
*High mortality — early recognition and aggressive surgery are key


==See Also==
==See Also==
*[[Necrotizing Fasciitis]]
*[[Necrotizing fasciitis]]
*[[Testicular Diagnoses]]
*[[Perianal abscess]]
*[[Necrotizing Soft Tissue Infections]]
*[[Testicular torsion]]
*[[EBQ:LRINEC Score]]
*[[Septic shock]]


==References==
==References==
<references/>
<references/>


[[Category:ID]]
[[Category:Infectious Disease]]
[[Category:GU]]
[[Category:Urology]]
[[Category:Surgery]]

Revisión actual - 09:36 22 mar 2026

Background

  • Necrotizing fasciitis of the perineum, genitalia, and/or perianal area
  • A life-threatening surgical emergency with mortality 20-40%[1]
  • Polymicrobial infection: aerobic + anaerobic organisms (E. coli, Bacteroides, Streptococcus, Clostridium, S. aureus)
  • Rapidly progressive — tissue destruction can advance centimeters per hour
  • Source: perianal (most common), urogenital, or cutaneous infection

Risk Factors

  • Diabetes mellitus (present in 40-60% of cases)
  • Immunosuppression (HIV, malignancy, chemotherapy, transplant)
  • Obesity
  • Chronic alcohol use
  • Peripheral vascular disease
  • Perianal abscess, urethral stricture, urinary tract instrumentation
  • Recent surgery or trauma to the perineum

Clinical Features

  • Severe perineal/genital pain (often out of proportion to examination findings early on)
  • Erythema, edema, and tenderness of perineum/scrotum/vulva
  • Rapid progression: skin changes from erythema → dusky → bullae → necrosis → gangrene
  • Crepitus on palpation (subcutaneous gas — pathognomonic but not always present)
  • Fever, tachycardia, systemic toxicity / septic shock
  • Scrotal swelling with disproportionate pain
  • May appear deceptively benign early in the course

Evaluation

  • Clinical diagnosis — do not delay surgical consultation for imaging
  • Labs: CBC (leukocytosis often >15,000), BMP, lactate, blood cultures, CRP
  • CT with contrast: subcutaneous gas, fascial thickening, fat stranding, abscess formation
    • CT has high sensitivity (~90%) but should not delay surgery[2]
  • LRINEC score may help risk-stratify (see LRINEC score calculator)
  • X-ray: may show subcutaneous emphysema

Management

  • Emergent surgical debridement — the single most important intervention
    • Often requires multiple return trips to OR for serial debridement
    • Early surgery correlates with decreased mortality
  • Broad-spectrum IV antibiotics
    • Vancomycin (or Linezolid) +
    • Piperacillin-tazobactam (or Meropenem) +
    • Clindamycin (for toxin suppression and synergistic coverage)
  • Aggressive IV fluid resuscitation and vasopressors for septic shock
  • Tetanus prophylaxis
  • Wound care: vacuum-assisted closure (VAC) after debridement
  • Consider hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBO) as adjunct (limited evidence)

Disposition

  • ICU admission with emergent surgical consultation
  • Urology and/or general surgery
  • High mortality — early recognition and aggressive surgery are key

See Also

References

  1. Eke N. Fournier's gangrene: a review of 1726 cases. Br J Surg. 2000;87(6):718-728. PMID 10848848.
  2. Levenson RB, et al. Fournier gangrene: role of imaging. Radiographics. 2008;28(2):519-528. PMID 18349455.