Pharyngitis
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Background
- Inflammation or infection of the pharynx
Microbiology
- Viruses (most common)
- Bacteria
- Streptococcus pyogenes (most important bacterial cause)
- Fusobacterium necrophorum, with risk of Lemierre syndrome
- Arcanobacterium haemolyticum
- Corynebacterium diphtheriae, causing diphtheria
- Neisseria gonorrhoeae
Clinical Manifestations
- Sore throat with or without fevers
- Streptococcal pharyngitis may result in lymphadenitis, sinusitis, otitis media, mastoiditis, necrotizing fasciitis, toxic shock syndrome, acute rheumatic fever, and post-infectious glomerulonephritis
Centor Criteria
- The Centor criteria help to identify those at risk of streptococcal pharyngitis who may benefit from antibiotics
- Used in patients with onset of symptoms within the last 3 days
- Criteria
- One point for each of:
- Age 3 to 14 years
- Exudate or swelling of tonsils
- Tender or swollen anterior cervical lymph nodes
- Temperature >38ºC
- Remove one point for age ≥45 years
- One point for each of:
- Interpretation:
- 0 points: 1-2.5% risk; no antibiotics
- 1 point: 5-10% risk; no antibiotics
- 2 points: 11-17% risk; optional rapid strep testing or culture
- 3 points: 38-35% risk; consider rapid strep testing or culture
- ≥4 points: 51-53% risk; consider rapid strep testing or culture as well as empiric antibiotics
Management
- Most common cause is viral, which requires supportive care
- To estimate risk of streptococcal pharyngitis, apply the Centor criteria, described above
- 0-1 points: no further tests
- 2-4 points: consider ruling out streptococcal pharyngitis with rapid test or culture, with treatment if positive
- ≥4 points: consider empiric treatment