Cellulitis & Wound Infection: ICD-10 Codes (L03, T79.3), Clinical Signs & Treatment Guidelines

Quick answer: Cellulitis (ICD-10 L03) and wound infection are assessed using NERDS criteria (superficial) and STONEES criteria (deep); first-line treatment is flucloxacillin or amoxicillin-clavulanate with MRSA-directed cover when indicated, supported by topical antimicrobials including silver dressings, iodine, PHMB, and medical-grade honey.

ICD-10 Codes for Cellulitis and Wound Infection

ICD-10 Code Description Notes
L03.011–L03.019 Cellulitis of finger Right, left, or unspecified
L03.111–L03.119 Cellulitis of lower limb Most common site; right, left, unspecified
L03.211–L03.219 Cellulitis of face Includes orbital, periorbital
L03.311–L03.319 Cellulitis of trunk Chest, abdominal wall, back
L03.90 Cellulitis, unspecified Avoid if site is known
T79.3XXA Post-traumatic wound infection, initial encounter Use for infected traumatic wounds
L08.0 Pyoderma / impetigo Superficial bacterial skin infection
L02.x Cutaneous abscess, furuncle, carbuncle Sub-coded by site (L02.0–L02.9)
B95.61 MRSA causing disease classified elsewhere Secondary code; add to L03 or wound code
B95.62 MRSA in sepsis (MSSA = B95.61) Use with sepsis diagnosis codes
M72.6 Necrotising fasciitis Surgical emergency — red flag

Understanding the Wound Infection Continuum

Wound infection exists on a spectrum from contamination through to systemic sepsis. The International Wound Infection Institute (IWII) 2022 Consensus Document defines five levels of microbial interaction with wound tissue:

  1. Contamination: Organisms present but not multiplying; no host response.
  2. Colonisation: Organisms multiplying but no clinical signs of infection.
  3. Critical colonisation (local infection): Organism burden increases; wound fails to progress; subtle clinical signs without systemic response. NERDS criteria apply here.
  4. Local infection: Classic local signs — erythema, warmth, swelling, purulence, pain.
  5. Spreading/systemic infection: Cellulitis, lymphangitis, systemic inflammatory response — STONEES criteria and systemic antimicrobials required.

Biofilm is a critical factor in the IWII 2022 update. Up to 80% of chronic wounds contain biofilm — structured bacterial communities embedded in an extracellular matrix that confers resistance to both host defences and antibiotics. Effective biofilm management requires mechanical disruption (debridement) combined with antimicrobial agents.

NERDS and STONEES: Clinical Assessment Criteria for Wound Infection

Developed and validated by Sibbald et al., the NERDS and STONEES mnemonics provide a standardised, bedside assessment framework incorporated into the IWII 2022 Consensus Document. These tools are particularly validated for chronic wounds (diabetic foot ulcers, venous leg ulcers, pressure injuries).

Mnemonic Criteria (≥3 of 5/7 required) Level of Infection Management Implication
NERDS
(superficial)
N — Non-healing wound (no size reduction in 2–4 weeks) Superficial / critical colonisation Topical antimicrobials (silver dressings, PHMB, iodine, honey)
E — Exudate increasing
R — Red friable granulation tissue
D — Debris (dead tissue, slough) on wound surface
S — Smell (malodour)
STONEES
(deep)
S — Size increase Deep & surrounding tissue infection Systemic antibiotics + topical antimicrobials + debridement
T — Temperature elevation (>3°F / ~1.7°C vs. mirror site)
O — Os (bone exposed or probe-to-bone positive)
N — New areas of wound breakdown
E — Exudate increase
E — Erythema and/or oedema (cellulitis)
S — Smell

Cellulitis vs. Erysipelas: How to Tell Them Apart

Both conditions involve bacterial infection of the skin and are frequently confused. Accurate diagnosis guides appropriate management:

Feature Erysipelas Cellulitis
Layer involved Superficial dermis and lymphatics Deep dermis and subcutaneous tissue
Borders Well-demarcated, raised, clear edge Poorly demarcated, diffuse edge
Colour Bright red ("fiery red"), shiny Dull red to pink
Common organisms Group A Streptococcus (GAS) GAS, Staphylococcus aureus (including MRSA)
Sites Face, lower leg Lower limb (most common), any site
First-line antibiotic Penicillin V / amoxicillin Flucloxacillin; amoxicillin-clavulanate if mixed flora

ABSSSI Classification: Acute Bacterial Skin and Skin Structure Infections

The ABSSSI classification — used in clinical trials and regulatory submissions — encompasses three categories:

  • Cellulitis/erysipelas: Skin erythema, oedema, and warmth without fluctuance; minimum 75 cm² lesion area (per FDA definition).
  • Wound infection: Purulent discharge, warmth, fluctuance, or induration from a wound site (surgical, traumatic, or chronic).
  • Cutaneous abscess: Localised collection of pus with surrounding inflammation.

Antimicrobial Stewardship: First-Line Treatment and MRSA Considerations

NICE Guideline NG141 (Cellulitis and Erysipelas: Antimicrobial Prescribing, 2019) and the MOH Singapore antimicrobial stewardship programme both emphasise narrow-spectrum empirical therapy to reduce selection pressure for resistant organisms.

Non-Purulent Cellulitis

  • First-line (oral): Flucloxacillin 500 mg–1 g four times daily (preferred for Staphylococcus coverage); amoxicillin 500 mg three times daily where Streptococcus predominates
  • Penicillin allergy: Clarithromycin 500 mg twice daily or clindamycin 300–450 mg four times daily
  • MRSA suspected (purulent, risk factors): Doxycycline 100 mg twice daily (oral) or vancomycin (IV) per local sensitivity data
  • Inpatient / severe: IV flucloxacillin 1–2 g four times daily; escalate to vancomycin if MRSA

Singapore hospitals, including SGH, NUH, and TTSH, maintain local MRSA prevalence data through the National Infection Prevention and Control Committee (NIPCC) under MOH Singapore. Community-acquired MRSA (CA-MRSA) is less common in Singapore than in North America but is increasing; healthcare-associated MRSA (HA-MRSA) remains the dominant phenotype in institutional settings.

Topical Antimicrobial Dressings: Evidence and Selection

Product Active Agent Indications Notes
Mepilex Ag, Aquacel Ag Ionic silver Critically colonised / locally infected wounds; moderate-high exudate Broad-spectrum; active against MRSA; biofilm-disrupting
Inadine Povidone-iodine 10% Superficially infected wounds; low exudate Avoid in thyroid disease; short-term use
Iodosorb Cadexomer iodine Chronic infected wounds with slough; high exudate Absorbs exudate and releases iodine; debriding action
Prontosan (PHMB) Polyhexamethylene biguanide Wound cleansing, irrigation; biofilm prevention Well-tolerated; low cytotoxicity; reduces biofilm
Medihoney Medical-grade Manuka honey Infected wounds including MRSA; malodorous wounds Osmotic + H₂O₂ + MGO activity; anti-biofilm properties
Red Flag: Necrotising Fasciitis (ICD-10 M72.6)
Suspect necrotising fasciitis when erythema spreads rapidly, pain is disproportionate to appearance, skin appears dusky or necrotic, bullae are present, crepitus is felt, or the patient is systemically septic. The LRINEC score (CRP, WBC, Hb, Na, Cr, glucose) ≥6 supports the diagnosis (PPV 92%). This is a surgical emergency — immediate surgical debridement, ICU admission, and broad-spectrum IV antibiotics (piperacillin-tazobactam or meropenem) are required. Referral to SGH, NUH, or CGH emergency surgical teams is essential. Do not delay for imaging if clinical suspicion is high.

Wound Infection Management in Singapore: Community and Institutional Context

Singapore's healthcare system manages wound infections across multiple care settings. Community nurses at TTSH Community Health and CGH provide home wound care services for patients with cellulitis following hospital discharge. The MOH Singapore antimicrobial stewardship programme mandates documentation of indication, organism, and duration for all antibiotic prescriptions in public hospitals. NSC (National Skin Centre) manages complex dermatological wound infections including recurrent cellulitis, MRSA skin disease, and skin structure infections associated with inflammatory dermatoses.

Frequently Asked Questions: Cellulitis and Wound Infection

How long should antibiotics be prescribed for cellulitis?

NICE NG141 recommends 5–7 days for mild–moderate cellulitis, reassessing at 48 hours. If there is no improvement at 48 hours, step up the antibiotic or consider inpatient IV therapy. Total duration is typically 5–14 days depending on severity and clinical response. Prolonged courses should be avoided to limit antimicrobial resistance selection pressure, per MOH Singapore antimicrobial stewardship guidelines.

When should I send a wound swab for culture?

Wound swabs are indicated when: the wound is not responding to empirical antibiotics after 48–72 hours, MRSA is suspected (prior carriage, healthcare contact), the patient is immunocompromised, there is purulent exudate, or when the infection is in a high-risk anatomical area (face, hands, joints). Surface swabs often yield colonising organisms; deep-tissue samples (biopsy or aspiration) provide more clinically meaningful cultures.

Can cellulitis be managed at home in Singapore?

Mild cellulitis (small area, no systemic features, immunocompetent patient) can be managed in the community with oral antibiotics and district nursing wound care review. Admission criteria include: systemic sepsis, rapid progression, orbital or facial cellulitis, failure of oral antibiotics, comorbidities (diabetes, immunosuppression), and lower limb cellulitis with deep vein thrombosis risk. Singapore's Community Health Assist Scheme (CHAS) supports subsidised community nursing review for wound care in eligible patients.

References

  1. IWII (International Wound Infection Institute). Wound Infection in Clinical Practice: Principles of Best Practice. Consensus Document 2022 Update. London: Wounds International; 2022.
  2. Sibbald RG, Woo K, Ayello EA. Increased bacterial burden and infection: the story of NERDS and STONES. Adv Skin Wound Care. 2006;19(8):447–461.
  3. Sibbald RG, Orsted HL, Schultz GS, et al. A cross-sectional validation study of using NERDS and STONEES to assess bacterial burden. Ostomy Wound Manage. 2009;55(8):40–52.
  4. NICE. Cellulitis and Erysipelas: Antimicrobial Prescribing (NG141). London: NICE; 2019. Updated 2022.
  5. Wilkins EGL, Stanton King L. Cellulitis and erysipelas. Lancet. 2004;364(9440):1211–1212.
  6. Wong CH, Khin LW, Heng KS, Tan KC, Low CO. The LRINEC (Laboratory Risk Indicator for Necrotising Fasciitis) score: a tool for distinguishing necrotising fasciitis from other soft tissue infections. Crit Care Med. 2004;32(7):1535–1541.
  7. Lipsky BA, Dryden M, Gottrup F, et al. Antimicrobial stewardship in wound care: a Position Paper from the British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy and European Wound Management Association. J Antimicrob Chemother. 2016;71(11):3026–3035.
  8. Ministry of Health Singapore. Antimicrobial Stewardship Programme. Available at: www.moh.gov.sg. Accessed May 2026.
Topical Antimicrobial Dressings Available at EMIS+
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