A 45-year-old alcoholic male presents with fevers and right-hand pain. He cannot recall what happened but thinks he may have punched someone in the face in a bar fight two nights earlier. He has tried over-the-counter anti-inflammatory agents, but they have not helped decrease the pain. His temperature is 100.8 ° F, blood pressure is 132/ 88 mmHg, and pulse is 78/ min. On physical exam, he has a skin break over his second phalanx-metacarpal region. He is holding his second finger in slight flexion. He has a sausage-shaped swelling of the finger, as well as flexor tendon sheath tenderness that extends the entire length of the tendon. His pain increases with passive motion of the finger. What is the most likely diagnosis?
(A) Suppurative tenosynovitis due to Eikenella corrodens
(B) Gout
(C) Dupuytren's contracture
(D) Suppurative tenosynovitis due to Pasteurella multocida
(E) Felon