Bilateral parotitis
Background
- Bilateral parotid gland swelling has a broad differential
- May be infectious, inflammatory, or systemic in etiology
- Mumps was the most common cause historically; now rare due to vaccination
Clinical Features
- Swelling over both parotid glands (preauricular, extending to angle of mandible)
- +/- overlying erythema, tenderness, constitutional symptoms
- Purulent discharge from Stensen duct suggests bacterial parotitis
- Bilateral painless enlargement raises concern for systemic disease (HIV, sarcoidosis, Sjögren syndrome, bulimia)
Differential Diagnosis
Bilateral Parotitis
- Viral infections
- Viral parotitis
- Parainfluenza
- Coxsackie virus
- influenza A
- Epstein-Barr virus
- Adenovirus
- HIV
- Cytomegalovirus
- Bacterial infections
- Noninfectious
- Salivary calculi
- Tumors
- Sarcoidosis
- Sjögren’s syndrome
- Thiazide diuretics
Evaluation
- History: fever, duration, vaccination status, HIV risk factors, sicca symptoms, medication review
- Exam: palpate glands, express Stensen duct (purulence suggests bacterial infection), assess trismus
- Labs: CBC, lipase/amylase (elevated in parotitis), consider mumps IgM if unvaccinated
- CT with contrast if concern for abscess, deep space infection, or malignancy
- Consider HIV testing, ESR/CRP, and SS-A/SS-B antibodies if systemic cause suspected
Management
- Infectious: Antibiotics (cover staph and streptococci — amoxicillin/clavulanate or clindamycin), warm compresses, sialagogues, hydration, parotid massage
- Viral (mumps): Supportive care, droplet precautions, report to public health
- Abscess: ENT/surgery consult for I&D
- Systemic: Treat underlying condition
Disposition
- Discharge most viral and uncomplicated bacterial parotitis with antibiotics and follow-up
- Admit for abscess, severe infection, airway compromise, or inability to tolerate PO
