Gangrene Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Gangrene, also known as tissue necrosis, is the death and subsequent decay of body tissues caused by many number of things including infection, thrombosis and lack of blood flow. It is most commonly the result of critically insufficient blood supply sometimes caused by an injury and subsequent contamination of the wound with bacteria. This condition is most common in the extremities. If conservative management fails, treatment is by amputation. The best weapon against gangrene is prevention, such as scrupulous foot care for diabetics.
One specific example of gangrene is so called diabetic foot that can be seen in long-standing complicated diabetes. It is caused by a combination of arterial ischemia, injury and poor healing that is rather common in diabetics. It often combines poor healing with a superimposed infection.
Wet gangrene is the type of gangrene we are most familiar with, yet it is not the most common. We are familiar with it because old western movies would have a scene where someone would get cut on the leg and it would get infected and soon become gangrene. A doctor would have to saw off their leg while they were biting a bullet and drinking whisky.
Wet gangrene is, in fact, caused by an injury such as a cut or open wound that becomes infected with a bacteria. The infection gets full of pus and does not drain well, blocking off the blood supply and the oxygen to that part of the body, soon the tissue dies. If left untreated the area will become shrunken and black and could continue spreading to other parts of the body. Treatment with antibiotics to kill the bacteria is often necessary and surgically removing the blackened tissue will cease the spread of the infection. Amputation is rarely necessary if caught in the early stages. Disinfecting and keeping wounds clean can prevent them from turning into gangrene.
Types
Gangrene can be caused from a bacterial infection that has not been treated; this is wet gangrene. When caused by a decrease in blood flow to an area of the body where the tissue in this part of the body has been injured or diseased, the diagnosis is dry gangrene.History
In the years before antibiotics, fly maggots were commonly used to treat wounds to prevent or stop gangrene, as they would only consume dead flesh. Their use largely died out after the introduction of antibiotics. In recent years, however, maggot treatment has regained some credibility and is sometimes employed to great effect in cases of chronic tissue necrosis.Pathophysiology
Wet gangrene
