Pharyngitis differential diagnosis: Difference between revisions
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|- | |- | ||
|Presentation | |Presentation | ||
|[[Sore throat]], | | | ||
* [[Sore throat]], | |||
* Pain on swallowing, | |||
* [[fever]], | |||
* [[headache]] | |||
* [[Abdominal pain|Abdominal]] pain, | |||
* [[nausea]] and[[vomiting]] | |||
|[[Dysphagia]] without [[odynophagia]] which will differentiate it from pharyngitis. | |[[Dysphagia]] without [[odynophagia]] which will differentiate it from pharyngitis. | ||
|Usually presents with a classic triad of severe sore throat | |Usually presents with a classic triad of | ||
|Usually present with stridor and drooling; and other symptoms include [[difficulty breathing]], [[Difficulty swallowing|fever, chills, difficulty swallowing]], [[hoarseness]] of voice | * severe sore throat | ||
* [[fever]] | |||
* [[lymphadenopathy]] | |||
|Usually present with [[stridor]] and [[drooling]]; and other symptoms include [[difficulty breathing]], [[Difficulty swallowing|fever, chills, difficulty swallowing]], [[hoarseness]] of voice | |||
|[[Sore throat]], pain on swallowing, [[fever]], [[headache]], [[cough]] | |[[Sore throat]], pain on swallowing, [[fever]], [[headache]], [[cough]] | ||
|[[Neck pain]], [[stiff neck]], [[torticollis]] | |[[Neck pain]], [[stiff neck]], [[torticollis]] | ||
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|[[Hemolysis|H. influenza type b, beta-hemolytic]] [[streptococci]], ''[[Staphylococcus aureus]],'' [[fungi]] and [[viruses]]. | |[[Hemolysis|H. influenza type b, beta-hemolytic]] [[streptococci]], ''[[Staphylococcus aureus]],'' [[fungi]] and [[viruses]]. | ||
|Most common cause is viral including [[adenovirus]], [[rhinovirus]], [[influenza]], [[coronavirus]], and [[respiratory syncytial virus]]. Second most common causes are bacterial; ''[[Group A streptococcal infection|Group A streptococcal bacteria]]'',<sup>[[Epiglottitis differential diagnosis|[5]]]</sup> | |Most common cause is viral including [[adenovirus]], [[rhinovirus]], [[influenza]], [[coronavirus]], and [[respiratory syncytial virus]]. Second most common causes are bacterial; ''[[Group A streptococcal infection|Group A streptococcal bacteria]]'',<sup>[[Epiglottitis differential diagnosis|[5]]]</sup> | ||
|Polymicrobial infection. Mostly; [[Streptococcus pyogenes]], [[Staphylococcus aureus]] and respiratory anaerobes ( | |Polymicrobial infection. Mostly; [[Streptococcus pyogenes]], [[Staphylococcus aureus]] and respiratory anaerobes (e.g. [[Fusobacterium|Fusobacteria]], [[Prevotella species|Prevotella]], and Veillonella species)<sup>[[Epiglottitis differential diagnosis|[6][7][8][9][10][11]]]</sup> | ||
|- | |- | ||
|Physical exams findings | |Physical exams findings | ||
|Inflammed [[pharynx]] with or without [[exudate]] | |Inflammed [[pharynx]] with or without [[exudate]] | ||
|White plaques that reveal an erythematous base when scraped | |White plaques that reveal an [[erythematous]] base when scraped | ||
|Diffuse lymphadenopathy, particularly bilateral and posterior cervical,[[Splenomegaly]] in 50% of cases, [[Hepatomegaly]] in 10% of cases, Pharyngeal petechiae, Rash in 90% of patients will develop a pruritic, [[maculopapular rash]] after the use of [[ampicillin]] or [[amoxicillin]] | |Diffuse lymphadenopathy, particularly bilateral and posterior cervical,[[Splenomegaly]] in 50% of cases, [[Hepatomegaly]] in 10% of cases, Pharyngeal petechiae, Rash in 90% of patients will develop a pruritic, [[maculopapular rash]] after the use of [[ampicillin]] or [[amoxicillin]] | ||
|[[Cyanosis]], [[Cervical]][[lymphadenopathy]], Inflammed [[epiglottis]] | |[[Cyanosis]], [[Cervical]][[lymphadenopathy]], Inflammed [[epiglottis]] | ||
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between the ages of 5 to 24 years.<sup>[[Epiglottitis differential diagnosis|[23]]]</sup> | between the ages of 5 to 24 years.<sup>[[Epiglottitis differential diagnosis|[23]]]</sup> | ||
|Usually in [[immunocompromised]] patients, including those with advanced [[Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)|HIV]]/AIDS | |Usually in [[immunocompromised]] patients, including those with advanced [[Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)|HIV]]/AIDS | ||
| | |Common in adolescents between 15-25 | ||
|Used to be mostly found in | |Used to be mostly found in | ||
pediatric age group between 3 to 5 years, | pediatric age group between 3 to 5 years, | ||
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|— | |— | ||
|— | |— | ||
| | |— | ||
|[[Thumbprint sign]] on neck x-ray | |[[Thumbprint sign]] on neck x-ray | ||
|Intraoral or transcutaneous USG may show an abscess making CT scan unnecessary.<sup>[[Epiglottitis differential diagnosis|[27][28][29]]]</sup> | |Intraoral or transcutaneous USG may show an abscess making CT scan unnecessary.<sup>[[Epiglottitis differential diagnosis|[27][28][29]]]</sup> | ||
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|Airway maintenance, p[[Parenteral|arenteral]] [[Cefotaxime]] or [[Ceftriaxone]] in combination with [[Vancomycin]]. Adjuvant therapy includes [[corticosteroids]] and racemic [[Epinephrine]].<sup>[[Epiglottitis differential diagnosis|[32][33]]]</sup> | |Airway maintenance, p[[Parenteral|arenteral]] [[Cefotaxime]] or [[Ceftriaxone]] in combination with [[Vancomycin]]. Adjuvant therapy includes [[corticosteroids]] and racemic [[Epinephrine]].<sup>[[Epiglottitis differential diagnosis|[32][33]]]</sup> | ||
|[[Antimicrobial]] therapy mainly [[penicillin]]-based and [[analgesics]] with [[tonsilectomy]] in selected cases. | |[[Antimicrobial]] therapy mainly [[penicillin]]-based and [[analgesics]] with [[tonsilectomy]] in selected cases. | ||
|Immediate surgical drainage and antimicrobial therapy. emperic therapy involves; ampicillin-sulbactam or clindamycin. | |Immediate surgical drainage and antimicrobial therapy. emperic therapy involves; [[Ampicillin-Sulbactam|ampicillin-sulbactam]] or [[clindamycin]]. | ||
|} | |} | ||
Revision as of 22:34, 29 January 2017
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Venkata Sivakrishna Kumar Pulivarthi M.B.B.S [2]
Pharyngitis Microchapters |
Diagnosis |
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Treatment |
Case Studies |
Pharyngitis differential diagnosis On the Web |
American Roentgen Ray Society Images of Pharyngitis differential diagnosis |
Risk calculators and risk factors for Pharyngitis differential diagnosis |
Overview
Pharyngitis should be differentiated from other infectious causes which mimic sore throat that includes oral thrush, infectious mononucleosis, epiglottitis and peritonsilar abscess.[1]
Differentiating Pharyngitis from other Diseases
The major goal of the differentiating patients with sore throat or acute pharyngitis is to exclude potentially dangerous causes (e.g. Group A streptococcus), to identify any treatable causes, and to improve symptoms. Identifying the treatable causes is important because timely treatment with antibiotics helps prevent complications such as acute rheumatic fever, post streptococcal glomerulonephritis.[2]
Thrush | Mononucleosis | Epiglottitis | Peritonsillar abscess |
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|
|
|
Variable | Pharyngitis | Oral thrush | Mononucleosis | Epiglottitis | Tonsilitis | Retropharyngeal abscess |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Presentation |
|
Dysphagia without odynophagia which will differentiate it from pharyngitis. | Usually presents with a classic triad of
|
Usually present with stridor and drooling; and other symptoms include difficulty breathing, fever, chills, difficulty swallowing, hoarseness of voice | Sore throat, pain on swallowing, fever, headache, cough | Neck pain, stiff neck, torticollis |
Causes | Group A beta-hemolytic streptococcus. | candidal infection | Epstein-Barr virus | H. influenza type b, beta-hemolytic streptococci, Staphylococcus aureus, fungi and viruses. | Most common cause is viral including adenovirus, rhinovirus, influenza, coronavirus, and respiratory syncytial virus. Second most common causes are bacterial; Group A streptococcal bacteria,[5] | Polymicrobial infection. Mostly; Streptococcus pyogenes, Staphylococcus aureus and respiratory anaerobes (e.g. Fusobacteria, Prevotella, and Veillonella species)[6][7][8][9][10][11] |
Physical exams findings | Inflammed pharynx with or without exudate | White plaques that reveal an erythematous base when scraped | Diffuse lymphadenopathy, particularly bilateral and posterior cervical,Splenomegaly in 50% of cases, Hepatomegaly in 10% of cases, Pharyngeal petechiae, Rash in 90% of patients will develop a pruritic, maculopapular rash after the use of ampicillin or amoxicillin | Cyanosis, Cervicallymphadenopathy, Inflammed epiglottis | Fever, especially 100°F or higher.[17][18]Erythema, edema and Exudate of the tonsils.[19] cervical lymphadenopathy, Dysphonia.[20] | Child may be unable to open the mouth widely. May have enlarged
cervical lymph nodes and neck mass. |
Age commonly affected | Mostly in children and young adults,
with 50% of cases identified between the ages of 5 to 24 years.[23] |
Usually in immunocompromised patients, including those with advanced HIV/AIDS | Common in adolescents between 15-25 | Used to be mostly found in
pediatric age group between 3 to 5 years, however, recent trend favors adults as most commonly affected individuals[22] with a mean age of 44.94 years. |
Primarily affects children
between 5 and 15 years old.[24] |
Mostly between 2-4 years, but can occur in other age groups.[25][26] |
Imaging finding | — | — | — | Thumbprint sign on neck x-ray | Intraoral or transcutaneous USG may show an abscess making CT scan unnecessary.[27][28][29] | On CT scan, a mass impinging on the posterior pharyngeal wall with rim enhancement is seen[30][31] |
Treatment | Antimicrobial therapy mainly penicillin-based and analgesics. | oral fluconazole | Airway maintenance, parenteral Cefotaxime or Ceftriaxone in combination with Vancomycin. Adjuvant therapy includes corticosteroids and racemic Epinephrine.[32][33] | Antimicrobial therapy mainly penicillin-based and analgesics with tonsilectomy in selected cases. | Immediate surgical drainage and antimicrobial therapy. emperic therapy involves; ampicillin-sulbactam or clindamycin. |
References
- ↑ Vincent MT, Celestin N, Hussain AN (2004) Pharyngitis. Am Fam Physician 69 (6):1465-70. PMID: 15053411
- ↑ Del Mar CB, Glasziou PP, Spinks AB (2006) Antibiotics for sore throat. Cochrane Database Syst Rev (4):CD000023. DOI:10.1002/14651858.CD000023.pub3 PMID: 17054126