Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0242429 (sore throat)
2,760 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In order to devise a strategy for the management of acute pharyngitis, the clinical features of 418 adults with sore throat were noted and throat cultures were obtained. Patients with cultures positive for group A beta-hemolytic streptococci had a significantly higher (P less than or equal to .01) frequency of recent exposure to streptococcal infection, pharyngeal exudate, enlarged or tender cervical nodes, and high fever (greater than or equal to 38.3 C [101 F]. Patients with negative cultures complained more frequently of cough. On the basis of these symptoms and signs, a clinical algorithm was developed and discriminant function scores were computed that identify patient populations with different probabilities of having streptococcal pharyngitis. The patients with moderate and high probabilities included 91% of patients with positive cultures but only 67% of the total patient population. These methods could be the basis for more efficient evaluation of adults with sore throat.
...
PMID:Recognition of streptococcal pharyngitis in adults. 110 66

This report is based on a study of acute infections of the upper respiratory tract in 1965 and detailed records of such infections in 1963 and 1964. A change from illnesses mainly yielding viruses to illnesses mainly yielding group A streptococci was noted around the age of 5 years. A positive culture for group A streptococci in patients over 4 years of age was highly correlated with a complaint of sore throat and with serological evidence of streptococcal infection. A bimodal age distribution curve for pharyngitis associated with a positive culture for group A streptococci was consistently noted. The incidence was highest in children aged 5-9 but a second smaller peak occurred among adults in the 30-39 age group. The evidence suggests that being female increases the risk of acquiring group A streptococci and of experiencing sore throat.
...
PMID:Streptococcal pharyngitis in general practice. 1. Some unusual features of the epidemiology. 139 9

In Norway anually half a million consultations are for acute sore throat. The clinical differentiation between streptococcal and non-streptococcal infection remains poor. A reliable diagnosis of beta-hemolytic streptococcal infections requires a screening test. In a multicenter study from general practice the rapid test Phadirect Strep A was compared with cultivation at two microbiological laboratories. 257 patients were included and the prevalence of beta-hemolytic streptococci was 41.6%. The results of valid calculations were: Sensitivity 70-77%; Specificity 86-89%; Positive predictive value 74-82%; Negative predictive value 81-88%. The results were considered in relation to body temperature and signs of local infection in the throat. There was no correlation between clinical signs and occurrence of beta-hemolytic streptococci. The Phadirect Strep A test was acceptably sensitive and specific for use in general practice. The test is easy to perform, and the results are available after five minutes. The test seems to be useful, and is an improvement in the daily management of patients with acute throat infections, especially in relation to the question of whether or not to prescribe antibiotics.
...
PMID:[Sore throat. Rapid detection of beta hemolytic group A streptococci by a coagglutination method]. 240 40

The Ventrescreen (Ventrex) rapid enzyme immunoassay test for detecting group A streptococcal antigen directly from a throat swab was compared with conventional blood agar throat culture in the diagnosis of beta haemolytic streptococcal infection among 311 patients with a sore throat attending a large suburban Jerusalem primary care clinic. Using the throat culture as the 'gold standard' the Ventrescreen test had a sensitivity of 82%, a specificity of 50%, a positive predictive value of 49%, and a negative predictive value of 82% for beta haemolytic streptococcal infection. These results are not good enough for the test to be considered a reliable substitute for throat culture in such a setting. The negative predictive value, however, supports the use of a negative test result to identify those patients in whom antibiotic therapy could be withheld until the result of their throat culture became available. These conclusions are at variance with recommendations from other studies of similar tests in different population groups, and stress the need for the careful evaluation, especially in primary care clinics, of any such rapid test which claims to be able to replace throat culture in the detection of beta haemolytic streptococcal infection.
...
PMID:Sore throat in family practice: comparison of blood agar throat culture with a rapid enzyme immunoassay test for diagnostic purposes. 255 61

Forty patients with a history of recurrent non-beta-hemolytic streptococcal tonsillitis (RNST) participated in a prospective randomized study comparing penicillin and clindamycin in the treatment of acute non-group A streptococcal infection. The efficiency of each antibiotic was evaluated according to its ability to alleviate acute infection and prevent recurrence. Surface tonsillar cultures were obtained both before and ten days after the termination of therapy, and specimens were processed for aerobic and anaerobic bacteria. Beta-lactamase-producing bacteria (BLPB) were present in 36 (90%) tonsillar cultures. Thirty-one BLPB were isolated in 17 patients before penicillin therapy and 42 BLPB were recovered from 19 after such treatment. Thirty-three BLPB were recovered in 19 patients before clindamycin therapy, after which four BLPB were isolated in three patients (P less than .05). From the second day posttherapy onward, significantly fewer patients who received clindamycin had fever, pharyngeal injection, and sore throat. In a 1-year follow-up period, recurrent tonsillitis was noted in 13 of the patients who received penicillin and in two treated with clindamycin (P less than .001). The data clearly demonstrate the superiority of clindamycin therapy over penicillin in patients with RNST.
...
PMID:Medical treatment of non-streptococcal recurrent tonsillitis. 276 34

A large outbreak of streptococcal sore throat in a Royal Air Force Training Camp resulted in five cases of rheumatic fever among the 16- to 18-year-old apprentices, and one case in a 33-year-old airman. The most prevalent type of group A streptococcus isolated from throat swabs was M-type 5 and there was serological evidence that at least four of the rheumatic fever (R.F.) cases were due to this type.Among the patients with uncomplicated throat infection the anti-streptolysin O (ASO) and anti-deoxyribonuclease B (anti-DNAase B) responses were in general rather low, even where there was evidence of protective antibody against type 5. However, a combination of the results of the ASO and anti-DNAase B tests gave an estimate of the extent of streptococcal infection 15-25% higher than did either test alone.The titres of antibody to M-associated protein (MAP) were >/= 60 in all the R.F. patients, and in about 50% of the other patients with ASO titres >/= 200. This figure is unusually high compared with data from several other outbreaks of streptococcal infection due to different serotypes and also greatly exceeds comparable figures for cases of sporadic sore throat and acute glomerulonephritis.
...
PMID:An outbreak of streptococcal sore throat and rheumatic fever in a Royal Air Force training camp; significance of serum antibody to M-associated protein. 459 39

Evaluation and treatment of emergency room patients complaining of sore throats are complicated by an unknown probability of follow-up. Tompkins' analysis of cost-effective sore throat management strategies was modified by adding an expression for variable follow-up rate. The original analysis specified a culture range when the probability of streptococcal infection was between 0.05 and 0.20, while the expanded analysis demonstrates that this range decreases with decreasing follow-up. For follow-up rates of 0.70 or less, all patients would be in either the treatment or no treatment group. This analysis demonstrates the importance of follow-up in out-patient decision making, and illustrates the methodology for including follow-up (and similar factors) in our analyses.
...
PMID:Treating sore throats in the emergency room. The importance of follow-up in decision making. 676 61

The diagnosis of streptococcal sore throat on clinical grounds remains a problem. In this study the clinical prediction in a group of young adults corresponded with laboratory findings indicative of a streptococcal (group A or non-A) infection in 23% of cases. The culture of throat swabs was of little value, as the only group A culture-positive patient did not show an antibody response, indicating a carrier state. In 5 cases a streptococcal infection was diagnosed on rising antibody titres only, as culture remained negative. The value of rising antibody titres as a diagnostic tool is also questioned, since they occurred more frequently in the healthy controls than in the sore-throat group. Antibiotic treatment for sore throat was rarely supported by laboratory findings in the young adult population studied.
...
PMID:Should young adults with sore throat be treated with antibiotics? 684 69

Clinical and pathologic data of 13 children, aged 5 to 16 years, with acute interstitial nephritis (AIN) are presented. The cause of AIN in these children was assessed as being related to infection in ten and methicillin in one; no infection, drug, or toxin could be implicated in two other patients. In addition to having various degrees of acute renal failure, all patients had systemic symptoms, most common of which were fatigue, fever, sore throat, and gastrointestinal disturbances. In six patients, the diagnosis of AIN was clinically suspected on the basis of tubular dysfunction such as low urinary specific gravity and glucosuria; in seven others the diagnosis was made after examination of the renal biopsy. Two patients had the nephrotic syndrome which resolved only after cytotoxic agents were added to corticosteroid therapy. The remaining 11 patients were given supportive therapy including peritoneal dialysis in one case. Complete recovery of renal function occurred in all patients within a mean interval of 69.5 +/- 34.7 days from the onset of symptoms, and all patients continue to have normal renal function during a follow-up period ranging from 1.5 to 10 years. We conclude that, in children, AIN is underdiagnosed, is most often associated with streptococcal infection, and carries an excellent prognosis.
...
PMID:Acute interstitial nephritis in children: a report of 13 cases and review of the literature. 701 63

Thirty-seven cases of streptococcal rheumatic fever in adults (20 women and 17 men; mean age 33 years) are reported. Only 3 patients had a history of previous rheumatic fever. In 73% of the cases untreated sore throat had occurred 8 to 30 days before the condition developed. Throat swabs taken during the rheumatic attack were positive for Streptococcus haemolyticus in only 5 out of 22 patients. The joints most commonly affected were those of the lower limbs and the symptoms were severe; in 2 out of 3 patients other joints were subsequently involved. Five patients had stable mitral regurgitation of undetermined duration, with systolic murmur. ECG abnormalities were noted in 7 patients, including 5 with prolongation of the PR interval and 2 with moderate elevation of the ST segment; these abnormalities regressed in all cases. No specific skin lesions were observed. The streptococcal infection was associated with a rise in antistreptolysins in 73% of the cases, a rise in antistreptokinases in 80% and a rise in both types of antibodies in 97%. Response to antibiotics and anti-inflammatory drugs was satisfactory in all cases. Cure was achieved within less than one month in 57% of the patients, but the condition lasted three years in 3 patients.
...
PMID:[Streptococcal rheumatic fever in adults]. 717 15


1 2 3 4 5 Next >>