How to Identify and Treat an Infected Cut
Infected Cuts: Signs, Treatment, and When to Come In — Carmel, IN
Why red streaks are a medical emergency, why hydrogen peroxide doesn’t belong inside wounds, and the closure timing window that determines whether stitches are still an option.
Cuts and lacerations are among the most common reasons patients come to Monarch Medicine — and wound infection is the most preventable complication when wounds are treated promptly and correctly. Two pieces of advice circulate widely that are clinically incorrect and worth addressing before anything else: hydrogen peroxide does not help wound healing, and red streaks from a wound are not a routine sign to “monitor at home.” This guide covers both, along with the full clinical picture of infected cuts, wound closure timing, and tetanus criteria.
I’m Dr. Lisa Clay, MD, FAAFP, board-certified family physician and Medical Director at Monarch Medicine. Our injury care services include wound evaluation, irrigation, primary closure (stitches, staples, or adhesive strips), and antibiotic prescribing when clinically indicated — all walk-in, same day, no referral needed.
The Red Streak Warning: When a Wound Becomes an Emergency
Come to Monarch Medicine immediately if streaking is present but the patient feels well, has no high fever, and can travel safely. Call 911 or go directly to the ER if the patient has a high fever (above 103°F), significant confusion, rapid heart rate, or appears severely ill — these are signs of systemic sepsis requiring IV antibiotics and emergency monitoring.
Recognizing Wound Infection: Early vs. Advanced Signs
Not all wound changes indicate infection. The first 24–48 hours after any cut typically involve some redness, swelling, and warmth — the normal acute inflammatory response that initiates healing. The signs that distinguish infection from normal inflammation are progression and direction of change:
| Sign | Normal Healing | Infection — Come In |
|---|---|---|
| Redness | Confined to wound edges, improving after day 2–3 | Expanding outward from wound edges (cellulitis), worsening after day 2–3 |
| Swelling | Mild, localized, decreasing over first 48–72 hours | Increasing or spreading beyond the wound area |
| Warmth | Mild, localized to wound site | Spreading warmth, hot to touch beyond wound margins |
| Discharge | Clear or slightly yellow fluid (serous or serosanguineous) in first 1–3 days | Thick, cloudy, green, or foul-smelling pus |
| Pain | Decreasing after first 24–48 hours | Worsening or persisting beyond 48 hours after initial injury |
| Streaking | Not present | Emergency — see above |
| Fever | Low-grade possible in first 24 hours after significant tissue injury | Fever above 100.4°F associated with wound = systemic infection, come in same day |
The Wound Closure Window: How Timing Affects Your Options
One of the most important decisions in wound care is whether and how to close a laceration. That decision is time-sensitive.
| Timing / Wound Type | Closure Approach | Clinical Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Within 6–8 hours, clean wound | Primary closure — stitches, staples, or adhesive strips | Lowest infection risk; fastest cosmetic healing |
| Facial wound within 12–24 hours | Primary closure often still possible | Rich facial blood supply provides infection resistance beyond standard window |
| Beyond closure window, clean wound | Open healing (secondary intention) or delayed primary closure at 3–5 days | Closing a contaminated wound traps bacteria; open healing is safer |
| Animal or human bite wounds | Typically left open; antibiotic prophylaxis; delayed closure if needed | Bite wounds carry high polymicrobial contamination; primary closure increases abscess risk |
| Heavily contaminated wounds | Thorough irrigation; open or delayed closure; antibiotics per wound type | Contamination with soil, organic matter, or foreign material requires irrigation before any closure decision |
How to Actually Clean a Wound — and What Not to Use
What to use instead: Irrigate the wound with clean running tap water for at least 5 minutes, or normal saline. After irrigation, apply antibiotic ointment (bacitracin, Neosporin) to the wound surface — not inside a deep wound. Hydrogen peroxide can be used to clean dried blood from the skin around the wound, not inside it.
Step-by-Step Home Wound Care for Minor Cuts
- Control bleeding first — apply firm, direct pressure with a clean cloth for at least 5–10 minutes without lifting to check; elevate the affected area above heart level while applying pressure
- Irrigate with clean water — run cool or lukewarm tap water over the wound for 5 full minutes; for deeper wounds, use a syringe or squeeze bottle to create irrigation pressure; do not scrub the wound bed
- Remove visible debris gently — use clean tweezers cleaned with isopropyl alcohol for visible surface debris; do not probe deeply for embedded material — come in for evaluation if debris may be deep in the wound
- Apply antibiotic ointment to the surface — a thin layer of bacitracin or triple antibiotic ointment on the wound surface reduces surface bacterial counts; do not pack ointment into deep wounds
- Cover with a sterile bandage — change daily or when wet or soiled; moist wound healing (keeping the wound covered rather than letting it air out) is the evidence-based standard — the “let it breathe” advice is outdated
- Monitor for infection signs daily — expanding redness, increasing pain, purulent discharge, or any streaking means come in same day
Tetanus: When You Actually Need a Booster
Tetanus risk varies significantly by wound type and vaccination history. The clinical criteria are specific — not simply “keep your shots current”:
| Wound Type | Booster Indicated If Last Tetanus Was… |
|---|---|
| Clean, minor wound (superficial cut from clean object) | More than 10 years ago |
| Dirty or high-risk wound | More than 5 years ago |
| Unknown vaccination history | Booster indicated regardless of wound type; primary series may be needed |
High-risk wound types that lower the threshold to 5 years include: puncture wounds (nail, thorn, splinter), wounds contaminated with soil or organic material, crush injuries, wounds with significant devitalized tissue, animal bites, and burns. Walk-in tetanus boosters (Tdap) are available through our vaccination services — Dr. Clay reviews wound type and vaccination history at every wound care visit.
Antibiotics: When They’re Indicated and Why MRSA Matters
Most superficial infected cuts respond to thorough irrigation, proper wound care, and monitoring without oral antibiotics. The antibiotic decision at Monarch Medicine is based on clinical wound assessment — not on whether pus is present.
Antibiotics are indicated for: expanding cellulitis (spreading redness beyond the wound edge), lymphangitis, purulent drainage not responding to local wound care, infected wounds in patients with diabetes, immunosuppression, or peripheral vascular disease, and animal or human bite wounds with significant crush or devitalization.
Community-acquired MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus) is now a common cause of skin and soft tissue infections in otherwise healthy patients — including children and young adults with no hospital exposure. CA-MRSA does not respond to the standard first-line oral antibiotics (amoxicillin-clavulanate, cephalexin) used for typical skin infections. A wound that initially appears to respond to antibiotics and then worsens — or a recurrent skin abscess — should prompt re-evaluation and consideration of CA-MRSA-targeted coverage (trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole or doxycycline). Dr. Clay selects antibiotic coverage based on wound characteristics and local resistance patterns.
“The two questions patients most often get wrong about wound care are which antiseptic to use and what red streaks mean. Using hydrogen peroxide to ‘disinfect’ a wound is so deeply embedded in home medicine that I explain its cytotoxicity at almost every wound care visit. And patients who come in describing red lines from a wound as something they’ve been ‘watching for a day’ are the ones that concern me most — that’s not a wait-and-see finding.” Dr. Lisa Clay, MD, FAAFP — Monarch Medicine Urgent Care
What to Expect at a Monarch Medicine Wound Care Visit
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Wound assessment and closure decision Dr. Clay evaluates wound depth, contamination, timing, and tissue viability — and determines whether primary closure, delayed closure, or open healing is clinically appropriate
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Thorough irrigation High-pressure saline irrigation of the wound bed before any closure decision — the single most effective intervention for preventing wound infection
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Closure options on-site Sutures (stitches), staples, and adhesive closure strips all available same visit; Dr. Clay selects the appropriate method based on wound location, depth, and tension
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Tetanus assessment and booster if indicated Vaccination history reviewed at every wound visit — walk-in Tdap booster available same day through our vaccination services
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X-ray for suspected foreign body On-site digital X-ray through our walk-in X-ray service when wound mechanism suggests embedded glass, metal, or other radiopaque material
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Antibiotic prescribing when clinically indicated Coverage selected based on wound type, depth, contamination, patient risk factors, and CA-MRSA consideration — with return criteria documented in your MyChart visit summary
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Written wound care and return instructions Specific signs that mean “come back immediately” — documented in Epic/MyChart so you have them at home for reference
Frequently Asked Questions About Infected Cuts
What do red streaks around a cut mean?
Should I use hydrogen peroxide to clean an infected cut?
How long do I have before a cut is too late to stitch?
Do I need a tetanus shot for a cut?
When does an infected cut need antibiotics?
Monarch Medicine Urgent Care — Carmel, IN
Walk-ins welcome · No appointment needed · Open 7 days
Have questions before your visit? Contact us and we’ll help you determine the right next step.
Last medically reviewed by Dr. Lisa Clay, MD, FAAFP on February 19, 2026
About the Author
Dr. Lisa Clay, MD, FAAFP
Board-Certified Family Physician
Dr. Lisa Clay is a board-certified family physician with nearly two decades of clinical experience. She founded Monarch Medicine Urgent Care in Carmel, Indiana to deliver compassionate, physician-led care with minimal wait times and transparent pricing.
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