» Articles » PMID: 11389492

Risk Factors for Skin and Soft-tissue Abscesses Among Injection Drug Users: a Case-control Study

Overview
Journal Clin Infect Dis
Date 2001 Jun 5
PMID 11389492
Citations 86
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Skin and soft-tissue abscesses, a common problem among injection drug users (IDUs), result in serious morbidity for the patient and costly hospitalizations for incision and drainage; however, there has been little etiologic or preventive epidemiologic research on this problem. We performed a case-control study that enrolled 151 IDUs who had been given a new diagnosis of abscess requiring incision and drainage (cases) and 267 IDUs who did not have abscess or other bacterial infection during the previous year and who were stratum-matched to cases according to age, sex, and race (controls). Subcutaneous or intramuscular, instead of intravenous, injection is a major risk factor for abscess among IDUs. The injection of a cocaine and heroin mixture, or "speedball," may predispose patients to develop abscess by inducing soft-tissue ischemia. Cleaning the skin with alcohol before injection was found to have a protective effect. Neither human immunodeficiency virus nor human T-lymphotropic virus type II seropositivity was significantly associated with abscess.

Citing Articles

Rural houselessness among people who use drugs in the United States: Results from the National Rural Opioid Initiative.

Ballard A, Kesich Z, Crane H, Feinberg J, Friedmann P, Go V Drug Alcohol Depend. 2024; 266:112498.

PMID: 39580899 PMC: 11685035. DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2024.112498.


'You feel how you look': Exploring the impacts of unmet water, sanitation, and hygiene needs among rural people experiencing homelessness and their intersection with drug use.

Ballard A, Cooper H, Young A, Caruso B PLOS Water. 2024; 1(5).

PMID: 38742171 PMC: 11090493. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pwat.0000019.


The burden of skin and soft tissue, bone and joint infections in an Australian cohort of people who inject drugs.

Morgan B, Lancaster R, Boyagoda B, Ananda R, Attwood L, Jacka D BMC Infect Dis. 2024; 24(1):299.

PMID: 38454356 PMC: 10918955. DOI: 10.1186/s12879-024-09143-0.


Drug preparation, injection-related infections, and harm reduction practices among a national sample of individuals entering treatment for opioid use disorder.

Marks L, Durkin M, Ayres K, Ellis M Harm Reduct J. 2024; 21(1):16.

PMID: 38243269 PMC: 10799462. DOI: 10.1186/s12954-024-00939-6.


Imaging of MSK infections in the ER.

Kompel A, Guermazi A Skeletal Radiol. 2023; 53(10):2039-2050.

PMID: 38147081 DOI: 10.1007/s00256-023-04554-7.