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Query: UMLS:C0031350 (pharyngitis)
2,405 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Glandular fever was described by Emil Pfeiffer in 1889. He characterized the disease as an infectious process with fever, a swelling of the lymph nodes including an enlargement of the liver and the spleen and with a pharyngitis. It was the beginning of a very interesting chapter of medical investigations during the next 100 years. The reports of leucocytosis in reaction to this acute infection were the next important step. Sprunt and Evans recommended therefore the term "infectious mononucleosis" in 1920. Further Paul and Bunnell (1932) found the presence of heterophil antibodies in glandular fever. In 1968 Henle and Henle discovered the relations of Epstein-Barr-Virus (EBV) to infectious mononucleosis. In this connection the pathogenesis of glandular fever was investigated. Also the diagnosis of the disease found a certain base by the EBV-antibodies and it was possible to give a reliable interpretation of the clinical course, the symptoms and the complications of infectious mononucleosis. Furthermore the atypical manifestation of glandular fever could be identified. In recent years the problems of persistent and chronic infections were discussed. At last the antiviral chemotherapy was tested.
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PMID:[100 years of Pfeiffer's glandular fever]. 185 56

Sore throats are most commonly due to infections, many of which are viral and do not require specific treatment. Symptoms and signs of the common cold, influenza or croup, the occurrence of conjunctivitis in some adenoviral infections, generalised lymphadenopathy and splenomegaly in glandular fever or the presence of vesicles characteristic of herpangina (Coxsackie A virus) or of herpes simplex infection, occasionally enable a clinical diagnosis and avoid the need for antibiotic therapy. In the case of treatable conditions a typical membrane may suggest diphtheria, a scarlatiniform rash infection due to Streptococcus pyogenes or to Corynebacterium haemolyticum, and a cherry-red epiglottis Haemophilus influenzae type b. Associated atypical pneumonia suggests infection with Mycoplasma pneumoniae or Chlamydia pneumoniae. Pharyngitis due to Neisseria gonorrhoeae may be accompanied by infection at other sites or by other sexually transmitted diseases. Candidal infection, in the appropriate clinical circumstance, should suggest HIV infection. Surgical drainage is required in the case of peritonsillar or retropharyngeal abscess. Noninfectious cases of sore throat, e.g. thyroiditis, are relatively uncommon considerations in the differential diagnosis of acute febrile pharyngitis. The most common problem is to recognise streptococcal pharyngitis, which requires antibiotic treatment for 10 days to avoid the risk of rheumatic fever.
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PMID:The sore throat. When to investigate and when to prescribe. 207

Infectious mononucleosis as a manifestation of primary Epstein-Barr virus infection occurs uncommonly in adults over age 40. While fever is almost universal, older patients with the disease often present without lymphadenopathy, pharyngitis, splenomegaly, lymphocytosis or atypical lymphocytes. Jaundice and hepatomegaly occur more commonly in older patients than in adolescents and create diagnostic confusion. Often, infectious mononucleosis in this age group is confused with lymphoma, leukemia or biliary obstruction, or is classified as "fever of unknown origin."
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PMID:Infectious mononucleosis in older adults. 224 52

A 37-year-old white woman presented with bilateral symmetrical ascending motor weakness. Subsequent evaluation revealed she was suffering from infectious mononucleosis. This case demonstrates that one should consider mononucleosis when presented with an idiopathic disease of the nervous system. The classic features of mononucleosis, such as pharyngitis, lymphadenopathy or splenomegaly, need not be present.
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PMID:The neurological sequelae of mononucleosis. 236 87

Very few case reports evaluate clinical and laboratory parameters of acute HIV infection. This paper describes seven such cases, four being mononucleosis like disease and one lymphocytic meningitis. Clinical manifestations were fever (7/7), lymphadenopathy (7/7), enlarged liver size (7/7) pharyngitis (6/7), malaise (4/7) and anorexia (4/7). Inversion of the normal T4/T8 ratio was present in 3/5 patients, all with normal absolute values for T4 cells. Moderate transaminase increases were found in 5/6; 5/7 had atypical lymphocytes in blood smear and 5/5 had abnormal mucoprotein levels. All patients had a total remission of clinical symptoms within two weeks. However, the abnormal lymph nodes and the enlarged liver persisted. Follow-up for ten months showed 4/7 patients with all abnormalities resolved and 3/7 still with persistent enlarged lymph nodes.
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PMID:[Acute infection associated with HIV: clinical and laboratory picture]. 248 21

The ability of the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) to cause latent lifelong infection in the host and its capabilities of transformation may have important implications for the elderly host. Reports in the literature and hospital records were reviewed to determine the activity of EBV in the elderly. Seroepidemiologic surveys demonstrated that 90%-97% of adults more than 60 years old were seropositive for EBV. Geometric mean antibody titers and the percentage of individuals with high antibody titers to EBV increased with age--changes that were not associated with clinical illness. Only 29 cases of infectious mononucleosis have been reported in adults more than 60 years old. The elderly with infectious mononucleosis had significantly fewer occurrences of pharyngitis, lymphadenopathy, and splenomegaly when compared with young adults. The cases of two patients with illnesses that did not meet full criteria for infectious mononucleosis but may still have represented clinical manifestations of EBV infection are presented. Other EBV-associated diseases reported in the elderly include nasopharyngeal carcinoma and possibly B cell lymphoproliferative disease but not a chronic mononucleosis-like syndrome.
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PMID:Epstein-Barr virus and the elderly host. 253 52

Forty-four patients, including 26 adults and 18 children under 15 years of age, were referred for evaluation of recurrent or persistent illnesses, with symptoms including pharyngitis, lymphadenopathy, fever, headaches, arthralgia, fatigue, depression, dyslogia, and myalgia. Thirty-nine patients were positive for Epstein-Barr virus antibody with antibody levels compatible with active infection for at least 1 year. Antiviral capsid antigen and anti-early antigen titers of patients were significantly greater (p less than 0.001) than age-group-matched controls. The frequency, number, duration, and patterns of symptoms, as well as patient sex, were compared by age in study patients seropositive and seronegative for Epstein-Barr virus. Illness patterns were not associated with changes in specific antibody titers or clinical findings. Lymphocyte phenotype and function analyses were done in 11 of the 39 patients positive for Epstein-Barr virus antibody; no consistent differences from normal were found. Only 1 of 32 patients had circulating interferon, in contrast to 7 of 7 patients with acute infectious mononucleosis. There were many adverse consequences of the illness. Epstein-Barr virus infection may not be self-limiting, and the virus may be associated with clinically recognizable illness other than infectious mononucleosis in children as well as in adults.
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PMID:Evidence for active Epstein-Barr virus infection in patients with persistent, unexplained illnesses: elevated anti-early antigen antibodies. 257 66

The authors report 16 cases of cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease in previously healthy adults. Constant features included pyrexia lasting 3 to 8 weeks and mononucleosis occurring 2-3 weeks after the onset of fever. Moderate hepatomegaly without jaundice, splenomegaly and morbilliform or petechial rush were observed in 30 to 50 p. 100 of cases. None had pharyngitis. Mild increase in serum transaminase activity (2 to 5 N) was present in 13 of the 16 patients, but increased alkaline phosphatase activity was observed in only 3 of them. Liver biopsy was obtained in 10 patients. Liver lesions were characterised by the association of intra lobular granuloma, abundant mononuclear cells in the sinusoids and hepatic peri-venous inflammation but hepatocellular necrosis was not prominent. Typical intracellular inclusions were not seen, either in hepatocytes or in cells of biliary ducts. The diagnosis was ascertained by positive viremia and or viruria and presence of IgM antibodies. The outcome was favourable although clinical and biological signs lasted for about 8 weeks. The authors conclude that adults with chronic pyrexia, no pharyngitis and sub-clinical hepatitis with mild increases in transaminase activity and histologic mononucleosis hepatitis showing mononuclear infiltrates and granuloma formation are likely to have CMV disease.
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PMID:[Granulomatous hepatitis in cytomegalovirus infection in healthy adults]. 282 62

We describe a severe multisystem Coxsackie virus type B3 infection in a previously healthy 14-year-old girl who presented with a mononucleosis-like syndrome (MS). Initial observations included a prominent cervical lymphadenopathy, exudative pharyngitis and leucocytosis with atypical lymphocytosis. At the end of the 2nd week of illness the patient developed meningoencephalomyelitis and haemolytic anaemia. Subclinical myocarditis was also recorded. Prolonged hepatitis recrudescing at the time of recovery coincided with serological evidence of a reactivated Epstein-Barr virus infection. The diagnosis was based on a significant rise in serum antibody titres against Coxsackie virus type B3, using the neutralization test. Intrathecal synthesis of antibodies to Coxsackie virus type B3 was also demonstrated. Generalized Coxsackie virus infections in adolescence are rare and an MS has not, to our knowledge, been associated with Coxsackie virus type B3 infection.
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PMID:Mononucleosis-like syndrome associated with a multisystem Coxsackie virus type B3 infection in adolescence. 284 Feb 91

We report clinical and laboratory findings in 11 previously healthy children with cytomegalovirus (CMV) mononucleosis and compare them with those of 18 adults with CMV mononucleosis and with those of 22 age-matched children with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) mononucleosis. Exudative pharyngitis was more common in children whereas prolonged fever was more common in adults. Prominent lymphadenopathy and exudative pharyngitis, however, were less frequent in children with CMV mononucleosis than in those with EBV mononucleosis. Nevertheless, children with CMV mononucleosis are more likely to resemble those with EBV mononucleosis than adults with CMV mononucleosis.
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PMID:Cytomegalovirus mononucleosis in children compared with the infection in adults and with Epstein-Barr virus mononucleosis. 284 3


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