Definition
Cellulitis is an acute bacterial infection of the dermis and subcutaneous tissue, usually spreading rapidly with poorly demarcated edges.
Common Causative Organisms
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Streptococcus pyogenes (Group A strep) – most common.
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Staphylococcus aureus – especially when abscess or purulence is present.
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MRSA – consider in recurrent, hospital-acquired, or IV drug users.
💡 PLAB Gem: If cellulitis has pus, boils, or abscesses → think Staph aureus.
If diffuse and spreading with lymphangitis → think Streptococcus pyogenes.
Risk Factors
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Skin break: trauma, ulcer, surgery, insect bite.
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Lymphatic obstruction, venous insufficiency.
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Diabetes mellitus.
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Immunosuppression.
💡 Exam Tip: In PLAB, diabetics with foot ulcers are a classic scenario for cellulitis.
Clinical Features
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Local signs: erythema, warmth, swelling, tenderness.
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Poorly demarcated edges (contrast with erysipelas, which has sharp borders).
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Systemic symptoms: fever, malaise, chills.
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May have regional lymphadenopathy.
⚠️ Red flag: rapidly spreading cellulitis with systemic toxicity → consider necrotising fasciitis.
Differential Diagnosis
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Erysipelas – raised, well-demarcated edges (usually Group A strep).
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DVT – painful, swollen leg but no fever.
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Venous eczema – itching, not tender, chronic.
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Necrotising fasciitis – severe pain out of proportion, systemic toxicity, rapid progression.
💡 PLAB Trap: If the exam vignette says “very painful, rapidly spreading, crepitus or necrosis” → DO NOT choose cellulitis. Correct answer = necrotising fasciitis.
Investigations (not always needed in mild cases)
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Usually clinical diagnosis.
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Blood cultures if systemic toxicity or immunocompromised.
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Swab of wound/pus if present.
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Imaging rarely required, unless to exclude deeper infection.
Management
General
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Elevate affected limb.
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Analgesia.
Antibiotics (UK/PLAB guidance)
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Mild (no systemic symptoms):
→ Oral flucloxacillin (first-line).
→ If penicillin-allergic: Clarithromycin or Doxycycline. -
Moderate–severe (systemic features, rapid spread, facial cellulitis, immunocompromised):
→ IV flucloxacillin (hospital).
→ If penicillin-allergic: IV vancomycin or clindamycin. -
MRSA suspected: use vancomycin, linezolid, or daptomycin (depending on scenario).
💡 PLAB Gem:
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Flucloxacillin is the first-line oral antibiotic for cellulitis.
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Co-amoxiclav if facial cellulitis (covers anaerobes from mouth).
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Penicillin allergy → clarithromycin.
Complications
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Abscess formation.
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Sepsis.
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Necrotising fasciitis.
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Recurrent cellulitis → chronic lymphoedema.
PLAB-Style Question Examples
Q1. A 50-year-old diabetic man presents with a warm, red, swollen lower leg. He has a fever of 38.2°C but is otherwise stable. What is the most appropriate antibiotic?
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A. Oral flucloxacillin
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B. Oral co-amoxiclav
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C. Oral clarithromycin
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D. IV vancomycin
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E. IV clindamycin
✅ Answer: A. Oral flucloxacillin
(Stable patient, no systemic toxicity → oral flucloxacillin first-line.)
Q2. A 45-year-old man presents with a red, swollen leg that is exquisitely tender. The pain is disproportionate to the skin changes. His BP is 85/50 mmHg and HR is 120. What is the most likely diagnosis?
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A. Cellulitis
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B. Erysipelas
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C. DVT
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D. Necrotising fasciitis
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E. Septic arthritis
✅ Answer: D. Necrotising fasciitis
(Severe pain out of proportion + hypotension + systemic toxicity = nec fasc, not cellulitis.)
Key PLAB Takeaways
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Flucloxacillin = 1st line for cellulitis.
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Clarithromycin/doxycycline if penicillin allergic.
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Co-amoxiclav for facial cellulitis.
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Think nec fasc if pain >> skin findings or systemic shock.
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Differentiate cellulitis (poor margins) vs erysipelas (clear margins).