Tonsillitis Flashcards
What is tonsillitis?
Infection of the tonsils
What are the common causes for tonsillitis?
Normally due to viral infections
- rhinovirus
- coronavirus
- adenovirus
Might be caused by bacterial infection (rarer) (10-30% of cases)
- Streptococcal disease (A beta-haemolytic streptococci (GABHS) –> streptococcus pyogenes
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What are the risk factors for developing tonsillitis?
- Age between 5-15 Years
- contact with infected people in enclosed spaces (e.g., child care centres, schools, prison)
- normally infectous in both, viral and bacterial disease
What are the presenting symptoms of someone with tonsilitis?
- Sudden onset
- Sore throat
- dysphagia
- Fever
- Painful lumbs on neck
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What are signs on examination of acute tonsillitits?
- Foul breath
- lymphadenopathy in neck
- Red, swollen pharynx
- with Visible exudate on tonsills
- If Viral
- headache
- earache
- nasal congestion
- cough
How can you differentiate between viral and bacterial tonsilltits?
FeverPAIN criteria are: score 1 point for each (maximum score of 5)
- Fever over 38°C.
- Purulence (pharyngeal/tonsillar exudate).
- Attend rapidly (3 days or less)
- Severely Inflamed tonsils
- No cough or coryza
- the higher the score, the higher the likelyhood of bacterial tonsillitis
Which investigations would you consider in a patient with suspected tonsillitis?
Normally diagnosis done clincally but additional might be:
- throat culture
- rapid streptococcal antigen test
How would you treat an acute tonsillitis?
Normally self limiting –> symptomatic approach
- salt-water gurgeling
- analgesia
If indicative of streptococcal disease
- Analgesia
- ABX (10 days phenoxymethylpenicillin)
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What is the epidemiology of tonsillitis?
- 10% of GP patients sore throat
- more common between children between 5-15
- normally seen in winter and early spring
- might occur any time of year
When would you consider secondary care referral in a person with Tonsilllitis?
- Drooling with respiratory distress warrants referral for hospital admission. Possible causes include epiglottitis in a child and peri-tonsillar abscess (quinsy).
- Severe dehydration with difficulty taking oral fluids warrants referral for rehydration.
- Peri-tonsillar abscess warrants hospital admission as there is a risk of airway compromise or rupture of the abscess and consequent sepsis.
- Suspected Kawasaki disease warrants hospital admission for assessment and specialist management.