Fournier Gangrene
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Basics
Description
- Inadequate hygiene leads to scrotal skin maceration and excoriation:
- Portal of entry for bacteria in tissue
- Once skin barrier is broken, polymicrobial flora spread along fascial planes of perineum
- Colles fascia fuses with urogenital diaphragm, slowing propagation posteriorly and laterally
- Anteriorly, Buck and Scarpa fascia are continuous, allowing rapid extension to anterior abdominal wall and laterally along fascia lata
- Testes and urethra are usually spared
- Three anatomic origins account for most cases:
- Lower urinary tract (40%): Urethral strictures, indwelling catheters
- Penile or scrotal (30%): Condom catheters, hidradenitis, balanitis
- Anorectal (30%): Fistulas, perirectal infections, hemorrhoids
- Rarely, intra-abdominal sources such as perforating appendicitis, diverticulitis, or pancreatitis have produced Fournier gangrene by dependent contiguous spread
Etiology
- Infection by polymicrobial flora (mixed aerobic and anaerobic organisms; often of skin or bowel origin)
- Mixed bacteria exert synergistic tissue-destructive effect
- End-arterial thrombosis in subcutaneous tissues produces anaerobic environment
- Bacterial toxins and tissue necrosis factors may contribute to clinical presentation
- Rare cases have shown candidal infections causing Fournier gangrene
- Risk factors:
- Trauma
- Diabetes
- Alcoholism
- Other immunocompromised states
- Morbid obesity
- Abdominal surgery
-- To view the remaining sections of this topic, please log in or purchase a subscription --
Basics
Description
- Inadequate hygiene leads to scrotal skin maceration and excoriation:
- Portal of entry for bacteria in tissue
- Once skin barrier is broken, polymicrobial flora spread along fascial planes of perineum
- Colles fascia fuses with urogenital diaphragm, slowing propagation posteriorly and laterally
- Anteriorly, Buck and Scarpa fascia are continuous, allowing rapid extension to anterior abdominal wall and laterally along fascia lata
- Testes and urethra are usually spared
- Three anatomic origins account for most cases:
- Lower urinary tract (40%): Urethral strictures, indwelling catheters
- Penile or scrotal (30%): Condom catheters, hidradenitis, balanitis
- Anorectal (30%): Fistulas, perirectal infections, hemorrhoids
- Rarely, intra-abdominal sources such as perforating appendicitis, diverticulitis, or pancreatitis have produced Fournier gangrene by dependent contiguous spread
Etiology
- Infection by polymicrobial flora (mixed aerobic and anaerobic organisms; often of skin or bowel origin)
- Mixed bacteria exert synergistic tissue-destructive effect
- End-arterial thrombosis in subcutaneous tissues produces anaerobic environment
- Bacterial toxins and tissue necrosis factors may contribute to clinical presentation
- Rare cases have shown candidal infections causing Fournier gangrene
- Risk factors:
- Trauma
- Diabetes
- Alcoholism
- Other immunocompromised states
- Morbid obesity
- Abdominal surgery
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