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Cat and Dog Bites
Bite wounds account for approximately 1% of all emergency
department visits: 10% of victims require suturing and 1-2% require
hospitalization for cat bites or dog bites.
Pathophysiology
Dog bites
account for 80-90% of animal bites.
Infection develops in15-20% of dog bite wounds.
Cat bites
account for 15% of animal bites. Cat bites
usually present as puncture wounds, of which 30-40% become infected.
Laboratory and radiologic evaluation
Radiographs
should be taken if there is considerable
edema and tenderness around the wound or if bony penetration or foreign bodies
are suspected.
Wounds seen within 8 to 24 hours after injury, that
have no signs of infection, do not require culture. If infection is present,
aerobic and anaerobic cultures should be obtained.
Treatment of dog and cat bites
Wound care
The wound should be cleansed with 1% povidone iodine solution (Betadine), and
irrigated with normal saline with a 20- to 50-mL syringe with an Angiocath.
Devitalized, crushed tissue.
Antimicrobial therapy
Prophylactic antibiotics are recommended for wounds that have
a high risk of infection.
High-risk bite wounds requiring prophylactic antibiotics
Full-thickness puncture wounds, severe crush injury and/or
edema, wounds requiring debridement.
Cat bite wounds
Bite wounds to the hand, foot or face; bone, joint, tendon or ligament, or wound
adjacent.
Treatment of infected wounds.
Infected bite wounds are treated.
Rabies
immunoprophylaxis
The incidence of rabies in persons who have been bitten by a dog is very low
because most dogs have been vaccinated. An untreated person has a less than 20%
chance of contracting rabies from the bite.
Wild animals (raccoons, skunks, bats) are the most common source of rabies.
Rabies is transmitted when the saliva of an infected animal comes into contact
with the broken skin or mucosa.
Tetanus Immunization.
Animal bites should be regarded as tetanus prone, although tetanus infection
resulting from cat and dog bites.
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