%0 Journal Article %T Localised necrosis of scrotum (Fournier's gangrene) in a spinal cord injury patient ¨C a case report %A Subramanian Vaidyanathan %A Bakul M Soni %A Peter L Hughes %A Paul Mansour %A Gurpreet Singh %A James Darroch %A Tun Oo %J BMC Family Practice %D 2002 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1471-2296-3-20 %X This male patient developed paraplegia at T-8 level 21 years ago at the age of fifteen years. He has been managing his bladder by wearing a penile sheath. He noticed redness and swelling on the right side of the scrotum, which rapidly progressed to become a black patch. A wound swab yielded growth of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). Necrotic tissue was excised. Culture of excised tissue grew MRSA. A follow-up wound swab yielded growth of MRSA and mixed anaerobes. The wound was treated with regular application of povidone-iodine spray. He made good progress, with the wound healing gradually.It is likely that the presence of a condom catheter, increased skin moisture in the scrotum due to urine leakage, compromised personal hygiene, a neurogenic bowel and subtle dysfunction of the immune system contributed to colonisation, and then rapidly progressive infection in this patient. We believe that spinal cord injury patients and their carers should be made aware of possible increased susceptibility of SCI patients to opportunistic infections of the skin. Increased awareness will facilitate prompt recourse to medical advice, when early signs of infection are present.Men with spinal cord injury (SCI) appear to have a greater incidence of bacterial colonisation of genital skin as compared to neurologically normal controls. Differences in skin flora between the SCI patients and neurologically normal persons may be the result of variables such as antibiotic usage, presence of a condom catheter, skin moisture, urine leakage, pH, skin temperature, personal hygiene and neurogenic bowel management [1].In addition to an increased incidence of bacterial colonisation of genital skin in SCI patients, SCI patients exhibit functional and morphological changes in the skin below the level of spinal cord lesion. These include clinical skin thickening, and histopathological findings of dermal fibrosis and perivascular inflammatory infiltrate. Denervation, loss of autonomi %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2296/3/20