- Home
- Parents Home
- Allergy Center
- Asthma Center
- Cancer Center
- Diabetes Center
- A to Z Dictionary
- Emotions & Behavior
- First Aid & Safety
- Food Allergy Center
- General Health
- Growth & Development
- Flu Center
- Heart Health
- Homework Help Center
- Infections
- Diseases & Conditions
- Nutrition & Fitness Center
- Play & Learn Center
- School & Family Life
- Pregnancy Center
- Newborn Center
- Q&A
- Recipes
- Sports Medicine Center
- Doctors & Hospitals
- Videos
- Para Padres
- Home
- Kids Home
- Asthma Center
- Cancer Center
- Movies & More
- Diabetes Center
- Getting Help
- Feelings
- Puberty & Growing Up
- Health Problems of Grown-Ups
- Health Problems
- Homework Center
- How the Body Works
- Illnesses & Injuries
- Nutrition & Fitness Center
- Recipes & Cooking
- Staying Healthy
- Stay Safe Center
- Relax & Unwind Center
- Q&A
- Heart Center
- Videos
- Staying Safe
- Kids' Medical Dictionary
- Para Niños
- Home
- Teens Home
- Asthma Center
- Be Your Best Self Center
- Cancer Center
- Diabetes Center
- Diseases & Conditions
- Drugs & Alcohol
- Expert Answers (Q&A)
- Flu Center
- Homework Help Center
- Infections
- Managing Your Medical Care
- Managing Your Weight
- Nutrition & Fitness Center
- Recipes
- Safety & First Aid
- School & Work
- Sexual Health
- Sports Center
- Stress & Coping Center
- Videos
- Your Body
- Your Mind
- Para Adolescentes
Cellulitis
What Is Cellulitis?
Cellulitis (sel-yuh-LY-tis) is a skin infection that involves areas of tissue below the skin's surface.
Cellulitis can affect any area of the body, but it's most common on exposed body parts, such as the face, arms, or lower legs.
What Causes Cellulitis?
Many different types of bacteria can cause cellulitis. The most common ones are group A streptococcus and Staphylococcus aureus. These bacteria usually live harmlessly on the skin and in the nose and throat, but sometimes they can get into the body through an area of broken skin, like a cut, bite, scratch, or body piercing, leading to infection.
Cellulitis can also sometimes happen when there isn’t any obvious broken skin, especially in people who have chronic conditions or who take medicines that affect the immune system.
Cellulitis is not contagious. It can't spread from person to person. But the bacteria that cause it can spread from an open wound to other people.
What Are the Signs & Symptoms of Cellulitis?
Cellulitis begins with a small area of skin that's:
- painful
- swollen
- warm
- red
As this area begins to spread, a child may begin to feel ill and get a fever. Swollen (sometimes called swollen “glands”) are sometimes found near the area of infected skin.
The time it takes for symptoms to start varies, depending on which bacteria cause the cellulitis. For example, a child with cellulitis caused by Pasteurella multocida, often found in animal bites, can have symptoms less than 24 hours after the bite. But cellulitis caused by other types of bacteria may not cause symptoms for several days.
How Is Cellulitis Diagnosed?
A doctor can usually diagnose cellulitis by asking questions and examining the area of affected skin. Usually other tests aren’t needed unless a person looks very sick. Then the doctor may take a blood sample to see if bacteria are in the bloodstream.
How Is Cellulitis Treated?
For a mild case of cellulitis, doctors prescribe oral antibiotics (taken by mouth). Your child should start to feel better in a couple of days, but they should take all the antibiotics as prescribed. Otherwise, the infection can return. To see if the treatment is working, you can draw a line around the red area of infected skin and watch to see if the edges of the red area change.
People with a more serious infection, or one that doesn’t get better after they take antibiotics by mouth, might need to get intravenous (IV) antibiotics in a hospital.
Can Cellulitis Be Prevented?
To prevent cellulitis, protect skin from cuts, bruises, and scrapes. This isn't easy, especially in active kids or those who play sports.
Kids and teens should:
- Use elbow and knee pads while skating.
- Wear a bike helmet when riding.
- Wear shin guards during soccer.
- Wear long pants and long-sleeved shirts while hiking in the woods (this can also protect them from bug bites and stings).
- Wear sandals on the beach.
When kids do get a cut or scrape, wash it well with soap and water. Apply an antibiotic ointment and cover the wound with an adhesive bandage or gauze. Check wounds often for the first few days to see if any signs of cellulitis begin.
When Should I Call the Doctor?
Call your doctor if:
- Any area of your child's skin becomes red, warm, and painful — with or without fever. This is even more important if the area is on the hands, feet, or face, or if your child has an illness or condition that weakens the immune system.
- Your child gets a large cut or a deep puncture wound.
- An animal bites your child, especially if the puncture wound is deep. Cellulitis can happen quickly after an animal bite. Human bites can cause skin infections too, so call the doctor if this happens.
How Can Parents Help?
- Make sure your child takes the antibiotics exactly as directed and for the full course.
- Follow the doctor's suggestions for treating the area of cellulitis, such as raising the affected part of the body or applying heat or warm soaks to it.
- You can give over-the-counter pain relievers such as acetaminophen or ibuprofen to ease pain and keep a fever down. Follow the package directions about how much to give and how often.
After your child takes antibiotics for 1 or 2 days, the doctor may schedule an office visit to check that the area of cellulitis has improved. This means that the antibiotics are working against the infection.