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Clinical Research on Foot & Ankle
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Massive Gas-forming Gangrene in a Diabetic Foot Infection

Shigeo Kono1*, Reiko Nakagawachi1, Jun Arata2 and Benjamin A Lipsky3
1WHO-collaborating Centre for Diabetes, National Hospital Organization, Kyoto Medical Center, Kyoto, Japan
2Department of Plastic Surgery, National Hospital Organization, Kyoto Medical Center, Kyoto, Japan
3University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA , University of Geneva, Switzerland, and University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Corresponding Author : Dr. Shigeo Kono MD, PhD
WHO-collaborating Centre for Diabetes
Kyoto Medical Center, Fukakusamukaihatacho
Fushimiku, Kyoto, Japan
Tel: +81-75-641-9161
E-mail: skono@kyotolan.hosp.go.jp
Received July 24, 2014; Accepted July 27, 2014; Published July 31, 2014
Citation: Kono S, Nakagawachi R, Arata J, Lipsky BA (2014) Massive Gasforming Gangrene in a Diabetic Foot Infection. Clin Res Foot Ankle 2:i101. doi:10.4172/2329-910X.1000i101
Copyright: © 2014 Kono S, et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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This 63-year-old woman with type 1 diabetes on hemodialysis burned her heel three months previously. Despite surgical debridement and topical silver sulfadiazine the wound worsened, with the development of purulent secretions and fever to 39°C, leukocytosis (35,900/mL), an elevated c-reactive protein (420 mg/L), but with a low creatine kinase (20 IU/L). Repeated aerobic and anaerobic cultures of wound tissue grew only Streptococcus agalactiae, Staphylococcus aureus and corynebacteria (unspeciated). She was treated with intravenous meropenem and vancomycin, but infection progressed and she was transferred to our hospital.
Examination of her foot revealed erythema, warmth, purulence, crepitus, and wet gangrene (Figures 1 and 2). Examination of the affected foot revealed sensory peripheral neuropathy but no circulatory impairment. Plain radiographs showed massive gas in the entire foot (Figure 3). Computed tomography confirmed extensive gas, making the plantar aponeurosis clearly visible (Figure 4).
She underwent immediate aggressive operative wound debridement, and then repeated bedside debridement. Repeat bacterial cultures of wound tissue grew only Streptococcus agalactiae and coagulasenegative Staphylococcus. Clindamycin was added to the meropenem and vancomycin therapy. Over 6 months her infection resolved and the foot healed without amputation (Figure 5).
Gas-forming gangrene is an uncommon, but potentially catastrophic, clinical presentation of diabetic foot infection. It is often misdiagnosed as clostridial gas gangrene, leading to rapid, but potentially unnecessary amputation before definitive diagnosis. While gas-forming infections may be caused by Clostridium species, those in the diabetic foot are more often associated with mixed aerobic (and sometimes anaerobic bacteria) and usually have a more gradual progression and better prognosis. Successful treatment with limb preservation requires rapid and accurate clinical and microbiological diagnosis, urgent surgical debridement, appropriate antibiotic therapy and sometimes hyperbaric oxygen therapy. In our patient treatment with extensive debridement and clindamycin, which suppresses staphylococcal and streptococcal toxin production, likely helped salvage her foot.
Financial support and disclosure
None of the authors have any conflicts of interests or financial disclosures relevant to this work.
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