Bite Wounds



Bite Wounds


Jonathan Pirie



Introduction



  • Human and animal bite wounds are common: ˜1% of all emergency department (ED) visits


  • Most bite wounds are minor, but may cause significant morbidity


  • Management requires an understanding of the microbiology of wound infections, assessment of low- versus high-risk wounds, treatment strategies, and tetanus and rabies prophylaxis


  • Notify local public health department for all animal bite wounds


Frequency and Infection Rates



  • Dog bites are most common type of animal bite but have low infection rates


  • Younger children are most susceptible to significant morbidity and occasional mortality


  • Cat bites less frequent but have much higher infection rate



    • Cats tend to inflict deep puncture wounds; they are hard to clean and tend to occur on hands and upper extremities


  • Human bites are least common yet have a relatively high infection rate


  • Beware of closed-fist injuries affecting area around the metacarpal-phalangeal joints


Microbiology



  • Bite wounds often involve multiple species:



    • Pasteurella species: dog and cat bite wounds


    • Eikenella corrodens: human bites


    • Capnocytophaga canimorsus: dog or cat bites, can cause septicemia and shock in patients with asplenia or immunosuppression



    • Other common organisms: streptococci, staphylococci, oral anaerobes


  • Amoxicillin/clavulanic acid is antimicrobial of choice: covers all potential pathogens in bite wound infections








Table 61.1 Bites and Infection Rates by Species



















SPECIES


FREQUENCY OF BITE (%)


FREQUENCY OF INFECTION (%)


Dog


80-90


2-20


Cat


5-15


30-50


Human


3.6-23


10-50



Bite Wound Management



  • Copious irrigation: normal saline with a 20-mL or larger syringe and 19G angiocath


  • Cautious debridement if indicated


  • Prophylactic antibiotics (high risk: see below)


  • Therapeutic antibiotics if signs of infection


  • Primary closure: low-risk lacerations


  • Immobilization in position of function


  • Elevation


  • Tetanus toxoid if indicated +/− tetanus immune globulin as necessary


  • Rabies prophylaxis if indicated

Note: Antibiotics alone not sufficient


Prophylactic Antibiotics



  • Controversial; limited studies


  • If present to ED within 24 hours, without signs of infection, and have high-risk criteria, consider for antibiotic prophylaxis


  • Give first dose in emergency department



  • Duration 3-5 days


  • Antibiotic of choice: amoxicillin-clavulanic acid


  • Alternatives: penicillin V + (cephalexin or cloxacillin)


  • Penicillin allergic: clindamycin + TMP-SMX

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Jun 22, 2016 | Posted by in EMERGENCY MEDICINE | Comments Off on Bite Wounds

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