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Fournier gangrene

Fournier gangrene
Classification & external resources
ICD-10 N49.8 (ILDS N49.81), N76.8
ICD-9 608.83
DiseasesDB 31119
eMedicine emerg/929  med/2814
MeSH D018934

Fournier gangrene is a type of necrotizing infection (gangrene) usually affecting the male genitals. It is a type of necrotizing fasciitis.

It was first described by Baurienne in 1764 and is named after a French venereologist, Jean-Alfred Fournier following five cases he presented in clinical lectures in 1883.

Aetiology

In the majority of cases Fournier gangrene is a mixed infection caused by both aerobic and anaerobic bacteria.[1]

Incidence

Only 600 cases of Fournier gangrene were reported in the world literature in the ten years since 1996, with most patients in their 60s or 70s with other concurrent illnesses.[2] However, Fournier's gangrene is not a reportable illness, and the condition is not uncommon, especially among diabetic individuals. A similar infection in women has been occasionally described.[3]

In Turkey it was reported that 46% of patients had diabetes mellitus[4] whilst other studies have identified approximately a third of patients having either diabetes, alcoholism or malnutrition, and 10% having medical immunosuppression (chemotherapy, steroids, malignancy).[5]

Treatment

Fournier gangrene is a urological emergency requiring intravenous antibiotics and debridement (surgical removal) of necrotic (dead) tissue. Despite such measures, the mortality rate overall is 40%, but 78% if sepsis is already present at the time of initial hospital admission.[4]

 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Fournier_gangrene". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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