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Cellulitis

Infectious Disease Clinics of North America, 2021
Cellulitis is a common infection of the skin and subcutaneous tissue caused predominantly by gram-positive organisms. Risk factors include prior episodes of cellulitis, cutaneous lesions, tinea pedis, and chronic edema. Cellulitis is a clinical diagnosis and presents with localized skin erythema, edema, warmth, and tenderness.
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Cellulitis

JAMA, 2016
Cellulitis is an infection of the deep dermis and subcutaneous tissue, presenting with expanding erythema, warmth, tenderness, and swelling. Cellulitis is a common global health burden, with more than 650,000 admissions per year in the United States alone.In the United States, an estimated 14.5 million cases annually of cellulitis account for $3.7 ...
Daniela Kroshinsky, Adam B. Raff
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Periorbital cellulitis

International Journal of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology, 1987
Periorbital cellulitis is a common complication of sinusitis in children. At some hospitals lumbar puncture is routinely done as part of the complete evaluation of children admitted with periorbital cellulitis. Presumably, the lumbar puncture is done to rule out meningitis which could be the result of extension of infection from the orbit to the ...
Kenneth M. Grundfast, Gregory A. Antoine
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Orbital cellulitis

Survey of Ophthalmology, 2018
Orbital cellulitis (OC) is an inflammatory process that involves the tissues located posterior to the orbital septum within the bony orbit, but the term generally is used to describe infectious inflammation. It manifests with erythema and edema of the eyelids, vision loss, fever, headache, proptosis, chemosis, and diplopia.
Theodora Tsirouki   +6 more
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Haemorrhagic cellulitis

Journal of Wound Care, 1999
This report describes two cases where haemorrhagic cellulitis was managed with corticosteroids and antibiotic therapy
L, Danielsen, E, Balslev, H K, Thomsen
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Pneumococcal cellulitis

The American Journal of Emergency Medicine, 1986
A 42-year-old man with pneumonia was admitted for rhabdomyolysis. Streptococcus pneumoniae was isolated from the cellulitis surrounding the muscular necrosis. Subcutaneous localisation of S. pneumoniae in the course of a septicemia has never been described, although rhabdomyolysis may be associated with bacterial infections.
M, Dhaene   +3 more
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Periorbital Cellulitis

Journal of Pediatric Ophthalmology & Strabismus, 1977
Sixty-seven cases of orbital cellulitis from BGSM are reported and 247 cases from the literature reviewed. Staphylococcus aureus was the predominant pathogen except in the age group from three months to three years where a significant number of cases yielded Hemophilus influenzae and Diplococcus pneumoniae.
G, Robie, R, O'Neal, D S, Kelsey
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Eosinophilic cellulitis

British Journal of Dermatology, 1979
Eight cases of eosinophilic cellulitis are described with acute cutaneous swellings followed by indolent infiltration. The histology is distinctive with focal phagocytosis of eosinophilic material in dermis. Occasionally these histological features are observed in other inflammatory dermatoses when eosinophils have infiltrated the connective tissue.
G C, Wells, N P, Smith
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