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Pharyngitis

Webpages concerning "Pharyngitis"

http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/000655.htm

http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/000655.htm

http://www.tcmtreatment.com/images/diseases/chronic-pharyngitis.htm

http://www.tcmtreatment.com/images/diseases/chronic-pharyngitis.htm

http://www.healthy.net/asp/templates/article.asp?PageType=Article&ID=966

http://www.healthy.net/asp/templates/article.asp?PageType=Article&ID=966

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Wikipedia-Article "Pharyngitis"

Acute pharyngitis
ICD-10 code: J02
ICD-9 code: 462
Chronic pharyngitis
ICD-10 code: J31.2
ICD-9 code: 472.1

Pharyngitis is a painful inflammation of the pharynx, and is colloquially referred to as a sore throat. Infection of the tonsils, tonsillitis (American English: tonsilitis) may occur simultaneously.

The major cause is infection, of which 90% are viral, the remainder caused by bacterial infection and rarely oral thrush (fungal candidiasis e.g. in babies). Some cases of pharyngitis are caused by irritation from agents such as pollutants, chemicals, or smoke.

Contents

Types

Viral sore throats

These comprise about 90% of all infectious cases and can be a feature of many different types of viral infections.

Bacterial sore throats

Group A Streptococcal

The commonest bacterial agent is streptococcus. Unlike adenovirus, there tends to greater generalised symptoms and more signs to find. Typically enlarged and tender lymph glands, with bright red inflammed and swollen throat, the patient may have temperature, headache, and aching muscles (myalgia) and joints (arthralgia).

Some immune-system mediatated complications may occur:

  • Scarlet fever with its vivid rash, although the milder disease seen after the 1950's suggests that the bacteria may have mutated to less virulant illness and some doctors now call this scarlatina (literally a 'little scarlet fever')
  • Historically the most important complication was of the generalised inflammatory disorder of rheumatic fever which could later result in Rheumatic heart disease affecting the valves of the heart. Antibiotics may reduce the incidence of this complication to under a third[1]. However the incidence of rheumatic fever in developed-regions of the world remains low even though the use of antibiotics has been declining[2] [3]. This may be a result of a change in the prevalence of various strains of bacteria. In underdeveloped regions, untreated streptococcal infection can still give rise to rheumatic heart disease and may be due to environmental factors, or reflect a genetic predisposition of the patient to the disease.
  • Post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis is an inflammation of the kidney. It is disputed whether antibiotics might reduce[4] the small risk of this or not[5].
  • Very rarely there may occur a secondary infection behind the tonsils which may cause a life-threatening septicaemia (Lemierre's syndrome)

Diphtheria

Diphtheria is a potential life threatening upper respiratiry infection caused by Corynebacterium diphtheriae which has been largely eradicated in developed nations since the introduction of childhood vaccination programmes, but is still reported in the Third World and increasingly in some areas in Eastern Europe. Antibiotics are effective in the early stages, but recovery is generally slow.

Treatment

The treatment of pharyngitis will vary according to the cause.

  • Iodine compounds sold as Betadine or TCP can be gargled to shorten the duration of the infection. These compounds are effective anti-viral agents.
  • Antibiotics are only helpful when a bacterial infection is the cause of the sore throat. For bacterial sore throats, antibiotics have been shown to only affect the degree of pain by day 4 and shorten the average natural duration by 16 hours overall (14 people need be treated for a week to reduce the duration by one day)[6].

Symptomatic

  • Lozenges (cough medicine) are often used for short-term pain relief.
  • Gargling with warm salty water is a popular household remedy, although there is only anecdotal evidence this gives other than temporary relief and likewise for the use of aspirin gargles.
  • Warm tea can help temporarily alleviate the pain of a sore throat.

References

External links

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