furunculosis
Furunculosis is a skin infection characterized by painful nodules called furuncles (boils) that arise from infection of hair follicles and surrounding tissue. It most often results from Staphylococcus aureus, including methicillin-resistant strains (MRSA), and may occur with nasal carriage of the organism. A furuncle is a single abscess, while clustered lesions can form a carbuncle.
Clinical features typically include tender, erythematous nodules that progress to fluctuant abscesses with purulent drainage. They
Diagnosis is usually clinical. Culturing the drained pus or exudate can guide antibiotic therapy, especially in
Treatment centers on incision and drainage of localized furuncles. Antibiotics are recommended when there is surrounding
Prognosis is generally good with proper drainage and treatment; recurrence is possible. Prevention focuses on hygiene,