Hi Jad,
Thank you for your question! Scott, Gene, Cathy and I chatted about it, and compiled a few questions on the patient and the wound that hopefully might be helpful:
- Does the patient have any underlying condition that led her to develop necrotizing fasciitis after a laceration?
- Would there be any info on her CRP levels prior to her developing necrotizing fasciitis? (meaning, was it elevated to begin with?)
- Are there any other comorbidities/ factors that might be impeding wound healing? The ulcer is over 1 year old, and it might be worthwhile reassessing the patient and the wound (e.g. nutrition, smoking habits, comorbidities, need for biopsy, etc)
- Where is the wound located? Would chronic osteo be a possibility?
As for CRP:
- CRP is non-specific, may indicate an inflammatory process and can also be elevated in many non-infectious processes such as ischemic heart disease, rheumatoid arthritis, etc.
- In terms of CRP levels and chronic wounds, here is some info:
* Wright and Khan evaluated levels of serum CRP following local and free-tissue reconstructions for traumatic injuries or chronic wounds of the lower limb and found that: CRP peaks on day 2 following soft-tissue coverage and falls thereafter. Peaks after day 4 post surgery indicate infective complications or further surgery. Patients with chronic wounds show a slower decrease in their CRP. Persistently elevated CRP following surgery is associated with infection and nonunion.https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19758848/
* Liu et al evaluated 20 patients with trauma-related chronic wounds (that failed to heal after 6 weeks of conservative local wound care). They found that the baseline medium serum CRP level was 66.4mg/L (range IQR, 41.3–122.9 mg/L), that is, 22 times higher than the reference range. Their wounds eventually developed healthy granulation tissue after debridement and NPWT. Authors noticed a significant drop in level of CRP - the median CRP was 10.4 mg/L on the last day of NPWT.
https://www.o-wm.com/article/prospective-pilot-study-evaluate-wound-outcomes-and-levels-serum-c-reactive-protein-and