Acute viral and bacterial pharyngitis Flashcards

1
Q

Grading of tonsils….0 to +4

If tonsils are absent?

A

0

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2
Q

If tonsils are touching each other “kissing tonsils”

A

+4

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3
Q

If tonsils are visible

A

+1

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4
Q

If tonsils are halfway between tonsillar pillars and uvula

A

+2

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5
Q

If the Tonsils are touching the uvula

A

+3

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6
Q

Acute viral pharyngitis is usually accompanied with?

A

Upper respiratory infection

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7
Q

Causative agents of viral pharyngitis are?

A
rhinoviruses
RSV
adenovirus
influenza virus
parainfluenza virus
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8
Q

What is the typical course of viral pharyngitis illness?

A

self limiting and usually resolves within 4-10 days without complications.

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9
Q

What antibiotics do you give to treat this condition?

A

NO ANTIBIOTICS ARE INDICATED

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10
Q

what are appropriate supportive care measures for viral pharyngitis?

A

antipyretics for mild fever and discomfort
rest is recommended until child is free of fever for 1 day
increase PO fluids
decongestants and cough suppressants may be given

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11
Q

Which medication is ineffective in relieving symptoms of viral pharyngitis?

A

Antihistamines are ineffective

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12
Q

Is cough, rhinorrhea, coryza, hoarseness, conjunctivitis, diarrhea symptoms seen with viral or bacterial pharyngitis?

A

VIRAL

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13
Q

What are the symptoms seen with Group A beta hemolytic strep pharyngitis?

A

history of strept A exposure or being around kids
occurs in winter or early spring
sudden onset of sore throat, severe pain with swallowing
headache, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain more common in kids
tonsillopharyngeal erythema with or without exudate
tender, enlarged anterior cervical lymph nodes
red, beefy swollen uvula
petichiae on palate, scarlatiniform rash

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14
Q

What is the modified Centor Criteria?

A
Used for decision making of pharyngitis
fever +1
absence of cough +1
tender anterior cervical adenopathy +1
tonsillar swelling or exudates +1
age 
younger than 15 years +1
15-45 years 0
older than 45 years -1
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15
Q

If patient scores 2-3 points with Modified Centor criteria what interventions are done?

A

order rapid test and throat culture

treat with antibiotics if positive

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16
Q

If patient scores 0-1 points on centor criteria what interventions are done?

A

no testing or antibiotics are warranted

17
Q

If patient scores 4+ points with Modified Centor Criteria what interventions are done?

A

No testing warranted

treat empirically with antibiotics

18
Q

T/F Children with Group A Beta hemolytic strept do not present with similar symptoms as adults

A

True

sometimes they only present with fever

19
Q

What are clinical manifestations of bacterial pharyngitis (strept throat)?

A
abrupt onset
pharyngitis
headache
fever 
abdominal pain
tender anterior cervical lymphadenopathy
tonsillar and pharyngeal inflammation and exudate (day 2 of illness)
difficulty swallowing due to pain
scarlatina rash (sand paper rash)
20
Q

What are two serious conditions that can occur after Group A Beta Hemolytic strep (GABHS) infection?

A
Rheumatic fever (scarlet fever) about 18 days after
Acute glomerulonephritis about 10 days after
21
Q

T/F if patient has cough it is unlikely that the patient has GABHS?

A

TRUE

22
Q

When does Scarlet fever show up?

A

usually get rash 24 hours after onset of GABHS

23
Q

What ages do you typically see scarlet fever?

A

less than 3 years old and in adults

24
Q

What are signs and symptoms of scarlet fever

A

scarlatina rash (sand paper rash) on trunk that blanches
Pastias line
circumolar palor
desquamation 7-10 days after start of rash on hands and feet and trunk and abdomen
strawberry tongue

25
Q

Is ASO testing helpful for diagnosis of strept?

A

NO

only used for retrospective diagnosis related to acute glomerulonephritis.

26
Q

What is treatment for GABHS?

A

if 60 pounds (27 kg) give Penicillin V 250 mg two or three times a day for 10 days
if >60 lbs. then given Penicillin V 500 mg PO BID x 10 days

27
Q

If patient is allergic to beta lactams what antibiotics are used to treat strept throat?

A

Clindamycin
Clarithromycin
Azithromycin

28
Q

What antibiotic has recently been associated with cardiac pathology (causing arrhythmias)

A

Clarithromycin

29
Q

When can kids return to school and no longer contagious?

A

After being on antibiotics for 24 hours

30
Q

What is the treatment for patients that have carrier state of GABHS (have the bacteria show up on culture swab but patient exhibits no immunologic response)?

A

Clindamycin or Rifampin plus Benzathine penicillin

Penicillin V plus Rifampin