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Streptococcal pharyngitis in Adult
See also in: Oral Mucosal Lesion
Other Resources UpToDate PubMed

Streptococcal pharyngitis in Adult

See also in: Oral Mucosal Lesion
Contributors: Anand N. Bosmia MD, James H. Willig MD, MSPH, Eric Ingerowski MD, FAAP, Paritosh Prasad MD
Other Resources UpToDate PubMed

Synopsis

Streptococcal pharyngitis, or strep throat, is an acute infection and inflammation of the pharynx that affects both children and adults. The most common bacterial etiology of pharyngitis is group A beta-hemolytic Streptococcus (GABHS, or Streptococcus pyogenes). The infection is transmitted via respiratory secretions.

Demographics:
  • Responsible for 5%-20% of cases of pharyngitis in adults.
  • Responsible for 15%-30% of cases of pharyngitis in children.
  • Most commonly occurs in children between ages 5 and 15 years. 
Symptoms (Often Abrupt Onset):
Typical
  • Sore throat, pain or difficulty swallowing
  • Fever
  • Chills
  • Malaise
  • Headache – frequently frontal in location
Variants
  • Younger children – abdominal pain, nausea, and vomiting
  • Severe unilateral throat pain should raise concern for a peritonsillar or retropharyngeal abscess, especially if this symptom arises or progresses several days after onset of symptoms. Inability to swallow, or odynophagia, should raise concern for a peritonsillar or retropharyngeal abscess.
Signs:
Typical
  • Pharyngeal erythema
  • Exudate (gray-white), tonsillar pillars or posterior pharynx; occasional palatine petechiae, erythema and edema of the uvula, enlarged tonsils
  • Anterior cervical lymphadenopathy (classic angle of jaw)
Variants
  • Scarlet fever – Usually face-sparing, punctate, erythematous, blanchable, sandpaper-like exanthem that may be accentuated in skin folds and creases (Pastia's lines) and may desquamate during convalescence; bright red tongue with inflamed papillae (strawberry tongue); erythematous pharynx and tonsils covered with exudate.
  • Children younger than 3 years – Coryza, purulent nasal discharge, excoriated nares (streptococcosis), and generalized adenopathy.
Risk Factors:
Timeline:
  • The incubation period is 24-72 hours.
  • In most people, fever resolves within 3-5 days and throat pain resolves within 1 week, even without specific treatment.
  • Patients with untreated GABHS pharyngitis are infectious during the acute phase and for 1 week after.
  • Late winter and early spring are peak GABHS seasons.
Complications of GABHS Illness:
Suppurative
Nonsuppurative

Codes

ICD10CM:
J02.0 – Streptococcal pharyngitis

SNOMEDCT:
43878008 – Streptococcal pharyngitis

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Last Reviewed:11/23/2024
Last Updated:11/25/2024
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Streptococcal pharyngitis in Adult
See also in: Oral Mucosal Lesion
A medical illustration showing key findings of Streptococcal pharyngitis : Abdominal pain, Chills, Fever, Headache, Nausea/vomiting, Tonsillar exudates, Oropharyngeal erythema
Clinical image of Streptococcal pharyngitis - imageId=5246650. Click to open in gallery.  caption: 'A "cobblestone throat" caused by patchy lymphoid tissue hypertrophy and exudates and erythema of the uvula and tonsillar fauces.'
A "cobblestone throat" caused by patchy lymphoid tissue hypertrophy and exudates and erythema of the uvula and tonsillar fauces.
Copyright © 2024 VisualDx®. All rights reserved.