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Query: UMLS:C0040425 (
tonsillitis
)
1,594
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A food-borne outbreak of
sore throat
caused by Lancefield group G beta-haemolytic streptococci and involving 50 persons occurred in May 1983 in an Israeli military camp. All of the patients available for clinical examination had
sore throat
and difficulty in swallowing. Exudative
tonsillitis
occurred in 46% of the patients and the body temperature was above 37.5 degrees C in 81%. The pattern of attack was uniform over the base and 37 became ill during the night and morning of the 5 May. Thirty-two (84%) of the throat cultures taken from 37 patients grew group G beta-haemolytic streptococci. Eight of 29 contacts were positive for group G beta-haemolytic streptococci and 6 of the 28 foodhandlers examined had positive cultures of the same group. The organism was also isolated from one food sample. The epidemiological and laboratory investigations indicated that a food handler, a convalescent carrier of group G streptococci, might have been the source of infection. Assumptions on the potential of non-group A streptococci to cause epidemics are discussed.
...
PMID:Food-borne outbreak of group G streptococcal sore throat in an Israeli military base. 367 89
A previously healthy 68-year-old woman presented with fever and
sore throat
. Her condition was initially diagnosed as necrotizing streptococcal
tonsillitis
and was treated with penicillin G, given intravenously. A swab of her throat taken for culture at the time of admission yielded Corynebacterium diphtheriae 48 hours later. At that time an electrocardiogram showed new T-wave inversion--evidence of diphtheritic myocarditis. She was immediately given 60 000 units of equine diphtheria antitoxin (following a test dose), but later that day she began choking, became apneic and died. The patient had not received any immunizing agents as a child, and no antitoxin was detected in a blood sample obtained prior to administration of the antitoxin. Her death re-emphasizes the seriousness of diphtheria, an infection to which many elderly people are susceptible.
...
PMID:Fatal diphtheria in an older woman. 397 86
The Neisseria species with which most otolaryngologists are familiar is N gonorrhoeae, which can cause acute pharyngitis or
tonsillitis
. Less well known is N meningitidis, responsible for potentially fatal meningococcal meningitis and meningococcemia. Although present in the carrier state in the pharynx of asymptomatic individuals, N meningitidis previously has not been associated with symptomatic pharyngeal or tonsillar disease. Its isolation from a patient with acute tonsillitis and failure to eliminate the symptoms and organism with penicillin led to use of rifampin. Disappearance of
sore throat
following use of this antibiotic and inability at completion of therapy to isolate the organism from a homogenate of excised tonsil would appear to implicate the organism as a cause of acute pharyngeal and tonsillar infection. It should be added to the list of organisms capable of producing acute tonsillitis, and rifampin should be considered a chemotherapeutic agent.
...
PMID:Tonsillitis due to neisseria meningitidis. Its treatment with rifampin. 678 29
Lemierre syndrome, also known as postanginal sepsis, is an illness characterized by the development of a fusobacterial septicaemia with multiple metastatic foci following an attack of acute tonsillitis. It typically affects previously healthy adolescents and young adults who, following an attack of
sore throat
, become acutely ill with hyperpyrexia, rigors and multiple metastatic abscesses. The clinical picture tends to vary widely because of the possible involvement of a number of body systems and organs in the disease process. This serious complication of oropharyngeal sepsis had a mortality rate in excess of 90 per cent in the pre-antibiotic era. Although now rarely seen and often forgotten, it remains a potentially life-threatening condition. We present four cases of post-
tonsillitis
fusobacterial septicaemia to illustrate the variability of the clinical presentation and stormy clinical course frequently associated with this rare syndrome.
...
PMID:Lemierre syndrome--a forgotten complication of acute tonsillitis. 756 77
Laser ablation of the palatine tonsils is a useful alternative to tonsillectomy in adults. Cryptic
tonsillitis
is a common problem causing recurrent infection,
sore throat
, and halitosis. Elimination and/or obliteration of surface pockets (crypts) of the palatine tonsils utilizing the CO2 laser was effective in 86 patients treated in the past 4 years. Ablation of the tonsil surface was performed in stages under local anesthesia in an office setting; CO2 laser energy delivered through the "SwiftLase" handpiece extension provided char-free, superficial layer ablation of tissue. "SwiftLase" is easily installed onto existing CO2 laser units and provides high-power densities by utilizing a focused laser beam in an extremely fast uniform scan over an extended area (up to 4 mm) within a fraction of a second. This method and results of its use are discussed.
...
PMID:Laser-assisted serial tonsillectomy. 780 35
Altogether 162 cases of
tonsillitis
were registered in two military units during the period of May 11-16. The disease took an acute course with short-time fever, symptoms of acute intoxication,
sore throat
, pronounced inflammatory changes in tonsils and swelling of regional (submaxillary and anterocervical) lymph nodes. In some of the patients (1.1%) sickness and vomiting and in 0.2% diarrhea were registered. In 6.7% of the patients scarlatiniform eruptions were observed on days 2-3 of the disease. In the course of the bacteriological examination of the patients group A streptococci, serovar T II, were isolated. The dynamic study of paired sera showed a considerable increase in the number of patients with a high level of antibodies to streptolysin 0 and group A polysaccharide. All patients were fed at the same canteen. The factor of the transmission of this infection could be butter, stored without observation of the required temperature conditions and apportioned by the soldiers of the kitchen police. Experimental study revealed that group A streptococci are capable for proliferation and accumulation in butter.
...
PMID:[An explosive outbreak of strep throat morbidity in an adult organized collective]. 806 41
There is a growing concern about rational prescribing of antibiotics. That is why a secondary analysis of prescribing antibiotics in upper respiratory tract infections has been conducted by means of a nationwide study of morbidity and interventions in The Netherlands. The mean percentage of antibiotic prescriptions varied from about 20% for acute otitis media and acute upper respiratory tract infections to about 70% for sinusitis and
tonsillitis
. Only attitude--toward prescribing antibiotics in
sore throat
--and years of settlement were important predictor variables. The other characteristics studied--type of practice, list size, frequency of use of Het Farmacotherapeutisch Kompas, containing national pharmacotherapeutical guidelines, and urbanization level were not. The importance of attitude, however, was less for general practitioners who went into practice after 1975. This means that the influence of a personal characteristic as attitude might have become less influential since the introduction of vocational training for general practice.
...
PMID:Prescription of antibiotics and prescribers' characteristics. A study into prescription of antibiotics in upper respiratory tract infections in general practice. 816 70
Postanginal sepsis or Lemierre's syndrome is characterised by septic thrombophlebitis of the jugular vein, metastatic abscesses in the lungs, soft tissues, joints or elsewhere, occurring several days to two weeks after
tonsillitis
or pharyngitis. The primary pathogen is a Gram-negative anaerobic rod, mostly Fusobacterium necrophorum. Previously healthy, young adults are affected mainly and the syndrome was seen more frequently in the pre-antibiotic era than it is nowadays. In the three young patients described here, a girl aged 15 and two boys aged 18 and 16, F. necrophorum was isolated from blood or pus. Histories and examinations were suggestive of Lemierre's syndrome. Ultrasound and CT scanning of the neck and other localisations proved to be important diagnostic tools in assessing the diagnosis. Response to therapy was slow and depended in at least one case on adequate drainage of abscesses. If the syndrome is suspected, initial antibiotic treatment should provide adequate coverage of anaerobic bacteria. In previously healthy patients with chills and fever occurring several days after a
sore throat
, Lemierre's syndrome should be considered.
...
PMID:[Postanginal sepsis caused by Fusobacterium necrophorum: Lemierre syndrome]. 836 43
We compared the efficacy and safety of amoxicillin 1 g b.i.d. for 6 days and penicillin V 1 MU t.i.d. for 10 days in the treatment of group A beta-haemolytic streptococcal (GABHS)
tonsillitis
in adults. 342 patients with acute tonsillitis and a positive test for streptococcal antigen were included in a multicentre, randomized, open-label study; 338 patients were evaluable in an intention-to-treat analysis, and 234 with a positive throat swab culture in a per-protocol analysis. In the per-protocol analysis, the GABHS eradication rate at the end of treatment was comparable in the two groups: 92% (115/125) on amoxicillin and 92.7% (101/109) on penicillin (p = 0.95), as were the clinical success rates of 96% and 95.4%, respectively (p = 0.92). At the follow-up visit (day 28-32), 90.8% of patients treated with amoxicillin and 92.6% of those treated with penicillin V were free of GABHS (p = 0.85).
Sore throat
disappeared significantly faster on day 2 (p = 0.039) in the amoxicillin group. The intention-to-treat analysis gave similar clinical results. Tolerability was good in both groups. The efficacy and safety of amoxicillin 1 g b.i.d. for 6 days were not statistically different from those of penicillin V 1 MU t.i.d. for 10 days in the treatment of streptococcal
tonsillitis
in adults.
...
PMID:6-day amoxicillin versus 10-day penicillin V for group A beta-haemolytic streptococcal acute tonsillitis in adults: a French multicentre, open-label, randomized study. The French Study Group Clamorange. 895 81
A 45-year-old woman presented to the emergency department (ED) with a 3-day history of fever, progressive
sore throat
, dysphagia, and difficulty speaking. She was diagnosed with acute lingual
tonsillitis
. The ED physician must consider this rarely discussed disorder when presented with the previously mentioned signs and symptoms. This will allow for prompt diagnosis and treatment of acute lingual
tonsillitis
and may help to avoid potential airway compromise.
...
PMID:Acute lingual tonsillitis. 914 94
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