Streptococcal pharyngitis: Difference between revisions

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*Single dose of [[dexamethasone]] shortens duration of pain
*Single dose of [[dexamethasone]] shortens duration of pain
**[[Dexamethasone]] 0.6mg/kg PO
**[[Dexamethasone]] 0.6mg/kg PO
==Complications==
*[[Acute rheumatic fever]]
*[[Scarlet fever]]
*[[Streptococcal toxic shock syndrome]]
*[[Post-Streptococcal Glomerular Nephritis (PSGN)]]
*[[PANDAS syndrome]]
*[[Peritonsillar abscess]]
*[[Cervical lymphadenitis]]
*[[Mastoiditis]]


==See Also==
==See Also==
*[[Peritonsilar Abscess]]
*[[Sore Throat]]
*[[Sore Throat]]



Revision as of 17:32, 1 March 2015

Background

  • Strep pharyngitis
    • Peak in 5-15yr old
    • Rare in <2yr of age
    • Accounts for only 15-30% of pharyngitis

Clinical Features

  • Sore throat
  • Painful swallowing
  • Fever
  • N/V
  • Tonsillar exudate
  • Palatal petechiae
StrepPhar.jpeg

Diagnosis - Centor Criteria

  1. History of fever
  2. Absence of cough
  3. Lymphadenopathy
  4. Tonsillar exudate or swelling
Points Treatment Likeilihood of Strep
4 Rx without testing 50% PPV
3 Rapid Strep Test 40% PPV
2 Rapid Strep Test
1 Do not test/treat
0 Do not test/treat 80% NPV

Differential Diagnosis

Pharyngitis

Others

Treatment

Antibiotics[1]

Treatment can be delayed for up to 9 days and still prevent major sequelae

Penicillin Options:[2]

  • Penicillin V 250mg PO BID x 10d (child) or 500mg BID x 10d (adolescent or adult)
  • Bicillin L-A <27 kg: 0.6 million units; ≥27 kg: 1.2 million units IM x 1
  • Amoxicillin 500-875 mg PO q12h or 250-500 PO q8h for 10d[3]

Penicillin allergic (mild):[2]

  • Cefuroxime 10mg/kg PO QID x 10d (child) or 250mg PO BID x 4d
  • Cefixime 400mg/day PO in single daily dose x10d or divided q12hr x10d

Penicillin allergic (anaphylaxis):[2]

  • Clindamycin 7.5mg/kg PO QID x 10d (child) or 450mg PO TID x 10d OR
  • Azithromycin 12mg/kg QD (child) or 500mg on day 1; then 250mg on days 2-5

Steroids

Complications

See Also

External Links

Source

  • Tintinalli
  • Rosen's
  • Logan LK, McAuley JB, Shulman ST. [Macrolide treatment failure in streptococcal pharyngitis resulting in acute rheumatic Fever]. Pediatrics. 2012 Mar;129(3):e798-802. Epub 2012 Feb 6.
  1. ID society guidelines
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Shulman, et al. Clinical Practice Guideline for the Diagnosis and Management of Group A Streptococcal Pharyngitis: 2012 Update by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. Clinical Infectious Diseases 2012;55(10):1279–82
  3. Shah, U. K., MD. (2020, October 14). Tonsillitis and Pharyngitis Organism-Specific Therapy: Specific Organisms and Therapeutic Regimens. Emedicine. https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/2011872-overview