Publication | Closed Access
Hand Infections in Patients With Diabetes Mellitus
29
Citations
18
References
2001
Year
Antimicrobial SusceptibilityHealth SciencesAntibioticsDiabetesHand InfectionsHealthcare-associated InfectionClinical InfectionFifty Diabetic PatientsProsthetic Joint InfectionsMicrobiologyInfection ControlMedicineAmputation RateClinical MicrobiologyAntimicrobial ResistanceDrug Resistance
Fifty diabetic patients with hand infections were studied retrospectively. The cause of infection varied, and the infections were divided into two groups: superficial infections and abscesses. The amputation rate was 14%. Only patients who presented with an abscess required amputation, and of those patients with abscesses, 17.5% required amputation. Eighteen of 38 cultured infections were polymicrobial, 4 contained Enterococcus, 11 contained gram-negative bacteria, and 3 contained anaerobic organisms. Bacteriologic culture analysis initiated a two-drug protocol: ampicillin with sulbactam (Unasyn; Pfizer, New York, NY) or piperacillin with tazobactam (Zosyn; Lederle, Pearl River, NY) and gentamicin (renal adjusted).
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