Bacterial Dermohypodermitis in the Elderly: Epidemiological, Clinical, Etiological, and Progressive Profile in 89 Patients, a Review of the Literature

) Bacterial Dermohypodermitis in the Elderly


Introduction
Bacterial dermohypodermitis (BDH) are acute infections of the dermis and hypodermis, most often linked to group A hemolytic beta streptococcus and sometimes to other germs.They include three entities: non-necrotizing bacterial dermohypodermitis or erysipelas (NNBDH), necrotizing bacterial dermohypodermitis without involvement of the fascia (NBDH) and necrotizing bacterial dermohypodermitis with involvement of the fascia or necrotizing fasciitis.In Senegal, they constitute the primary reason for hospitalization in dermatology departments [1,2].Bacterial dermohypodermitis occurs preferentially in the lower limbs, more rarely in the upper limbs, face, or buttocks.The diagnosis of bacterial dermohypodermitis is essentially clinical.It is based on the appearance of a febrile inflammatory swelling, most often topped by an erythematous plaque.Paraclinical examinations are not necessary for diagnosis but may show a biological inflammatory syndrome.Blood cultures rarely allow a germ to be isolated.The treatment of erysipelas is medical and is essentially based on beta-lactam antibiotics [3].As for necrotizing bacterial dermohypodermitis, its treatment is medico surgical.The evolution of bacterial dermohypodermitis is generally favorable, but sequelae such as lymphedema, which can progress to elephantiasis, are possible.Primary and secondary prevention of bacterial dermohypodermitis is mainly based on the management of risk factors.
In sub-Saharan Africa, bacterial dermohypodermitis constitutes a public health problem, especially due to voluntary cosmetic depigmentation [4].In West Africa, particularly in Senegal, studies on bacterial dermohypodermitis in elderly subjects are almost non-existent.Therefore, we carried out this work with the aim of determining the epidemiological, clinical, etiological, and progressive profile of bacterial dermohypodermitis in elderly subjects.

Material and Methods
This is a cross-sectional study, with retrospective data collection, covering the period from January 1, 2011, to December 31, 2021 (11 years).The study was carried out in the two-reference university hospital dermatology departments in Dakar (dermatology departments of the Aristide Le Dantec hospital and the Institute of Social Hygiene of Dakar).Patients were recruited from the hospitalization registers of these two units.All patients aged 65 or over, hospitalized with a febrile or non-febrile inflammatory swelling and diagnosed with bacterial dermohypodermitis, were included.Patients with incomplete or unusable records were not included.A standardized survey form was created for data collection.To ensure data confidentiality, patients' first and last names were initialed on the survey form.The following data were collected: sociodemographic, clinical, paraclinical, therapeutic and evolutionary.Data entry and analysis were performed using Office 2019 pack software and SPSS 25.0 for mac.Proportions of variables were compared using Chi-square or Fisher tests.The relationship was statistically significant if p ≤ 0.05.

Discussion
The limitations of our study lie in its retrospective nature.However, we carried out our work in the two referral dermatology departments in Dakar: Aristide Le Dantec Hospital and the Institut d'Hygiène Sociale de Dakar (IHS).In our study, the frequency of BDH patients aged 65 or over was 7.66%.In the study by Dioussé et al. [2], carried out at the Thiès regional hospital, a frequency of 14% of patients aged 60 or over was reported.
Our patients were predominantly females (59.6%).In Senegal, studies by Diédhiou et al. [5], Diatta et al. [6] and Dioussé et al. [2] showed the same results in subjects of all ages.In elderly subjects, this predominance of women could be explained by the progressive feminization of the population [7] and the fact that women's life expectancy is higher than that of men [8].
Regarding fever, the frequency of 39.3% (n=35) is lower than the results of Diédhiou et al. [5] and Thioub et al. [9], who reported it in 46.3% and 48% respectively of their adult patients of all ages.In Tunisia, the study by Mzabi et al. [10], involving 158 elderly subjects with BDH, showed an almost similar frequency of fever (37%).In Morocco, Chmali et al. [11] found fever in all their patients, in contrast to their elderly population.Indeed, during infection in the elderly, fever is inconstant due to quantitative and qualitative abnormalities in the production of pyrogenic cytokines (Tumor Necrosis Factor alpha (TNFα) and Interleukin-1) and the hypothalamic response to these substances [12,13].
In the case of necrotizing bacterial dermohypodermitis, its frequency of 34.8% in our patients remains higher than reported by Diédhiou et al. [5] (29.9%) and Diatta et al. [6] (10%) in their studies of adults of all ages.In the series by Diédhiou et al. [5], the necrotizing character was mainly related to diabetes.In our series, diabetes, which was not statistically associated with this clinical form (p=0.28), was noted in only 29% of patients presenting this necrotizing form.Our results are also superior to those of Dioussé et al. [2], who found a 10.4% frequency of NBDH in their series of 425 patients of all ages; the same applies to those of Cissé et al. [14], who found 12.7% in 244 patients of all ages.This disparity could be explained by the failure of immunity (immunosenescence), particularly cell-mediated immunity, in the elderly [15,16], and locoregional aggravating factors (lymphedema and peripheral artery disease).However, in the study by Mzabi et al. [10], only 8.8% (14/158) of elderly subjects with BDH had a necrotizing form.
The bilateral nature of BDH, noted in 7.8% of our patients, is rarely reported in the literature [17].In the study by Diédhiou et al. [5], bilateral topography was found in only 4.6% of their patients.In contrast, the study by Dieng et al. [18], involving 60 patients of all ages, found no bilateral leg forms; the same applied to the study by Gathse et al. [19] (n=53) in Congo.In our patients, this relatively high frequency of bilateral topography could be explained, apart from the numerous conditions, by the skin's fragility, which exposes it to several immediate entry points.These were found in 93.25% (n=83) of our patients.This result is close to those of the study by Saka et al. [20], who found an entry point in 85.6% of their patients of all ages.Similarly, Cissé et al. [14] reported it in 80% of their series.On the other hand, our results are far superior to those of Dioussé et al. [2], who reported the existence of an entry portal in only 52.5% of their patients.In our study, half of the entry sites were intertrigos between the toes.In the study by Saka et al. [20], intertrigo accounted for 41.6% of entry sites.In the study by Diédhiou et al. [5], carried out on adults of all ages, mainly diabetics, intertrigo accounted for 18.5% of the sites of entry, and in the study by Diatta et al. [6], it represented 41% of cases.
Table 7 shows that inter-toe intertrigo is more frequent in elderly subjects with BDH than in adults of any age, and that plantar fissures are a feature of advanced age.This finding may be explained by the increased susceptibility to infection in this population, due to immunosenescence [21] and greater xerosis.General risk factors were mainly arterial hypertension (56.2%), obesity (31.5%), diabetes (22.5%) and heart disease (5.6%).In the study by Mzabi et al. [10] carried out in an internal medicine and rheumatology departments, involving the same population, diabetes was found in 50.6% of patients, obesity in 33% and heart failure in 15.8%.In the studies by Pitché et al. [22] and Tianyi et al. [4], the general risk factors statistically correlated with BDH were voluntary cosmetic depigmentation and obesity.Lymphedema, found in 16% of patients with NBDH and 3.4% of patients with a non-necrotizing form, tends to be responsible for severe forms of BDH, as the protein-rich interstitial fluid provides an ideal culture medium for germ growth [23].In addition, in lymphedematous tissue, both innate and adaptive immunity are impaired [24].In terms of bacteriology, Staphylococcus Aureus was the only germ isolated in an abscessed form and in a bullous form in 6.7% (n=6) of patients in whom a sample was taken.In the literature, local sampling of the entry site is known for its lack of sensitivitý [25] explained by the bacteria's mechanism of action.However, in the study by Saka et al. [20], 13 out of 16 entry portal samples isolated Streptococcus in 4 patients, Staphylococcus aureus in 7 and Gram-negative bacilli in 2.
In terms of vascular investigation, Doppler ultrasonography of the lower limbs revealed PAD in 58.3% (7/12), including 5 cases of NBDH.This result is far superior to those of the study by Ndiaye et al. [26], who reported only one case of arterial abnormality in their 36 adult patients of any age.This difference can be explained by the fact that cardiovascular risk factors, especially those responsible for arteriopathy, are much more frequent in the elderly, as found in our study.In patients with NNBDH, PAD was only found in those with a bullous or abscessed form.Therefore, PAD, which is statistically linked to NBDH (p=0.05),should be researched in any elderly subject with severe BDH.About aggravating factors, the use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs is often reported in the literature [14,27].Although it was found in 22.4% (20/89) of our patients, it was not statistically significantly associated with necrotizing disease (p=0.99).In the Mzabi et al. study [10] to be exposed to NSAIDs during BDH, probably because they are less likely to be prescribed or recommended by pharmacies due to the side-effects, which are more pronounced in this population.As for phytotherapy, noted in 16% of our patients with DHBN, it is incriminated as a risk factor for the onset of this form in 26% of patients in the study by Cissé et al. [14].In our study, there was no statistically significant association (p=0.6) between this necrotizing form and phytotherapy.
For venous anomalies, the 20% frequency in our patients is lower than the 52.7% (19/36) found by Ndiaye et al. [26].These authors found 17 cases of venous insufficiency and 3 cases of thrombosis.In the study by Zaghdoud et al [28], carried out in Tunisia in adults of all ages, there were 10% (n=3) cases of venous thrombosis in 30 patients with BDH.Favorable outcome in 93.3% of our patients is described in several studies, including the one of Diatta et al. [6], who reported favorable outcome in 96% of their patients of all ages.In the studies by Dioussé et al. [2] and Diédhiou et al. [5], favorable outcome was less frequent, with 89% and 77.3% of their patients respectively.
In our patients, the 3.4% mortality due to septic shock was higher in patients with NBDH, in whom it was 6.4%, as opposed to 1.7% in those with NNBDH.This mortality is similar to the one reported in the study by Cissé et al. [14], involving patients of all ages with NBDH.It is also almost identical with the study by Diédhiou et al. [5], where it was 7.7%, and correlated with the necrotizing form (p=0.00001).On the other hand, in the study by Saka et al. [20], involving 104 patients of all ages, mortality was noted in 28.6% of cases of necrotizing fasciitis.This finding shows that mortality in bacterial dermohypodermitis does not appear to be age-related.
Regarding long-term complications, lymphedema was more frequent in patients with NBDH (19.6%) than in patients with NNBDH (7.4%).The onset of lymphedema during BDH may be related to a pre-existing abnormality of the lymphatic vessels, rather than the infection itself.The study by Damstra et al. [29], involving lymphoscintigraphy of both limbs in 40 patients with unilateral bacterial dermohypodermitis, showed that 90% (36/40) had contralateral lymphatic abnormalities at an uptake threshold of over 20%; and at threshold of 15%, this abnormality was 68% (27/40).Similar results were reported by Soo et al. [30].This predisposition is aggravated by bacterial dermohypodermitis, especially if repeated [31].Moreover, recent studies [32,33] have shown that the proper function and density of cutaneous lymphatic vessels are diminished in the elderly.
Lymphedema is a well-known factor in recurrence.Recurrence was noted in 2.2% of patients, including one with NNBDH and another with a necrotizing form.The frequency of recurrence was higher in the studies by Pitché et al [22] and Saka et al. [20], who reported it in 10% and 7.7% of their patients respectively.Similarly, in the study by Diallo et al. [34], recurrence was noted in 9% of patients of all ages.In the series of 235 patients by Madeira et al. [35], subjects aged 60 or over were at greater risk of recurrence than others.In the study by Inghammar et al. [36], involving 502 patients, the risk factors for recurrence were lymphedema, venous insufficiency, dermatosis and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).Apart from these risk factors, this disparity could be explained by the heterogeneity of patient follow-up periods between series.In the study by Ellis Simonsen et al. [37], involving 5780 patients aged under 65, recurrence was 11% within one year, 3.6% within 2 years and 3.3% after more than 2 years.In our patients, nearly complete control (97.6%) of entry sites would be one of the factors reducing recurrence.

Conclusion
Bacterial dermohypodermitis is relatively common in the elderly.Although fever may be absent, the necrotizing form is more frequent in this population than in adults.The main entry sites are inter-trigonous toes, but plantar fissures are a particular feature in the elderly.Moreover, the aggravating factors are essentially cardiovascular.Lastly, age is an additional factor in the occurrence of lymphedema.

Figure 1 :
Figure 1: Erysipelas of the foot and lower extremity of the right leg in an elderly patient with psoriasis.

Table 1 :
Distribution of the history and ground of the 89 elderly patients according to the type of bacterial dermohypodermitis; BDH:

Table 2 :
Distribution of 89 elderly patients suffering from bacterial dermohypodermitis according to dermatological signs.

Table 3 :
Distribution of 89 elderly patients with bacterial dermohypodermitis according to topography of dermatological lesions.

Table 4 :
Distribution of 89 elderly patients with bacterial dermohypodermitis according to biological test results.

Table 5 :
5 Clin Exp Dermatol Ther, an open access journal ISSN: 2575-8268 Distribution of complications in the 89 elderly patients by type of bacterial dermohypodermitis.

Table 6 :
Distribution of the 89 elderly patients according to statistical relationship between type of bacterial dermohypodermitis and ground.

Table 7 :
Comparison of gateway frequencies between our elderly patients with bacterial dermohypodermitis and 3 studies of adult patients of all ages.
, NSAID use was noted in only 2.5% of patients.These results suggest that elderly subjects are less likely and Progressive Profile in 89 Patients, a Review of the Literature.Clin Exp Dermatol Ther 9: 220.DOI: https://doi.org/10.29011/2575-8268.100220