Infection of skin and other soft tissue can lead to infection of bones (osteomyelitis) and joints (septic arthritis). Without prompt treatment, orthopaedic infections can become chronic. Thus, even a scratch on the fingertip has the potential to permanently disable your hand.
Fortunately, early diagnosis, appropriate antibiotic therapy, and surgical intervention when required can cure most infections and prevent permanent problems.
To control the spread of infections in hospitals, doctors and nurses wear gloves and gowns and wash their hands frequently.
To prevent infections in skin wounds, follow these tips:
Infections enter the body through breaks in the skin, especially puncture wounds and other injuries that are difficult to clean. Disease-carrying bacteria, viruses, and parasites that get into the body can destroy healthy tissue, multiply and spread through blood.
Having certain chronic diseases puts you at greater risk for infections. Examples include HIV, rheumatoid arthritis, diabetes mellitus, hemophilia, and sickle cell anemia. You can become infected through direct contact with an infected person or through indirect contact, as from a contaminated object.
Sometimes, joint infections develop from an internal hip or knee replacement device (prosthesis). The knee is the most commonly infected joint.
An infection may cause redness, warmth, and inflammation around the affected area. The area may be stiff, drain pus, and lose range of motion. Infections can give you fever and chills.
Infants may act irritable and lethargic, refuse to eat, or vomit. Always suspect infection if your child has pain or swelling in the limbs, spine, or pelvis. The child may limp or refuse to walk.
Infections pose special risks to young children for a number of reasons: