Abcess Surgery

An abscess is a localized collection of pus within tissues, organs, or confined spaces in the body, caused by infection and subsequent tissue destruction.

Pathophysiology:

Bacteria invade → tissue necrosis → neutrophil accumulation → liquefaction necrosis → pus formation.

Surrounded by a pyogenic membrane that walls off the infection.

Common Sites:
Skin & subcutaneous tissue, breast, perianal region, liver, lung, brain, kidney.

🔎 Clinical Features

Local signs (classic features of inflammation):

Redness, warmth, swelling, tenderness, fluctuation (pus inside).

Pointing abscess → thinned, shiny skin, may rupture.Systemic signs:

Fever, malaise, leukocytosis.

Toxic features if deep-seated or spreading infection.

⚕️ Diagnosis

Clinical examination (fluctuation test, pointing).

Ultrasound → helpful for deep or doubtful abscesses.

CT/MRI → for internal organ abscesses.

💊 Management

1. General Principles:

“Ubi pus, ibi evacua” → Where there is pus, evacuate it.

Incision & drainage (I&D) is the gold standard.

2. Treatment steps:

Local anesthesia or general anesthesia depending on size/location.

Adequate incision over the most fluctuant/pointing area.

Break loculi with finger/forceps.

Drain pus completely, send sample for culture & sensitivity.

Irrigation with saline, sometimes antiseptic solution.

Insert corrugated/rubber drain or pack cavity if large.

3. Antibiotics:

Adjunct only, not definitive.

Indicated for cellulitis, systemic toxicity, immunocompromised patients, or deep organ abscesses.

4. Supportive care:

Analgesics, antipyretics, hydration, glycemic control in diabetics.

⚠️ Complications

Local spread → cellulitis, necrotizing fasciitis.

Septicemia.

Chronic abscess/sinus formation.

Scarring after healing.