Pus will gradually flow out of the boil after it breaks, and the main component of the pus is Staphylococcus aureus, which is the most common pathogen in human suppurative infections. Whether or not a fire boil can be cured depends on whether or not the abscess is drained.
If the boil is small in size, it can be cured by squeezing out the abscess, but if it is large in size, it is easy to cause infection in the surrounding tissues, leading to recurrent attacks; try not to squeeze the abscess with your hands to prevent infection, especially for boils in the danger triangle.
Fire boils are suppurative inflammation of single hair follicles in deep and surrounding tissues, with early manifestations of redness, swelling, heat, and pain, and later abscesses gradually forming in the center of the nodules, and carbuncles can be formed in case of aggravation of the infection. Carbuncles are the development of multiple hair follicles, with a larger size, and are accompanied by systemic symptoms.
When the patient has the symptoms of fire boil, the abscess should be taken out in time, after the pus is drained, the inflammation may subside by itself, and some pus will spread to the deeper part of the hair follicle, causing the inflammation to spread and aggravate the condition, and the patient should be given erythromycin ointment, floxacin ointment, or other antibiotic medication, in order to prevent the secondary infection.
Patients with serious conditions need surgery to incise and drain, and it is recommended that patients go to the hospital for treatment in a timely manner.