Abstract:

The global mortality for Fournier’s gangrene is one in five. In half the cases, the infection is polymicrobial with either anaerobes or gram negative bacilli. Factors which worsen prognosis include renal insufficiency, streptococcal infection, or need for hospital admission. Diagnosis must be prompt and treatment multidisciplinary involving the surgeon, intensivist, and infectious disease specialist; early and adequate surgical debridement must be accompanied by well-chosen antibiotics and hyperbaric oxygen therapy. Post-debridement therapy requires a long period of dressing changes and skin grafting to achieve final wound closure. This is an aggressive disease with a high mortality, but the depth and extent of invasive infection does not determine prognosis; the first priority is prompt and wide surgical excision/debridement of infected tissues to pre-empt the development of systemic sepsis; this should not be deferred while arranging transfer to a facility with a hyperbaric chamber.

Cadot, Rouquette, Szym, André, , , , , (2003). [Life-threatening cellulitis, or Fournier’s gangrene of the perineum]. Journal de chirurgie, 2003 Feb;140(1):22-32. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12709649