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Strep Throat Can Easily Be Confused With Throat Infections Caused By Viruses — Here Are A Few Ways To Know The Difference

"My sore throats, you know, are always worse than anybody's."

So declares Mary to Anne in "Persuasion," Jane Austen's 1817 book. Most of us can relate to this feeling. There is no such thing as "just a sore throat." The pain, headache, fever and aches associated with a sore throat can make you feel terrible.

While sore throats can occur at any time of year, strep throat is more common in the fall, winter and early spring.

I am a professor of family medicine, a pharmacist and an expert on evidence-based medicine. My work involves the evaluation of research performed by others, and I have been following and analyzing research findings on strep for the past 30 years.

Many people incorrectly assume that all sore throats are due to strep throat, a bacterial infection of the pharynx, the middle throat area behind the nose and mouth, and patients often come to our family medicine office wanting to be checked and treated for strep with antibiotics.

» READ MORE: What's the best treatment for most sore throats?

However, neither testing nor treatment is always needed for a sore throat. Regardless of the cause, rest and pain relievers form the cornerstone of sore throat treatment.

Here's some guidance on whether and when testing is necessary.

Bacterial versus viral sore throats

Most sudden-onset sore throats are caused by viruses — the same ones that cause the common cold, the seasonal flu and COVID-19. There are more than 200 viruses that can cause sore throat and other symptoms related to the common cold.

But bacteria can also be the culprits behind a sore throat. One of the most common examples is strep throat, or group A pharyngitis.

Strep is caused by certain strains of Streptococcus pyogenes bacteria. There are many species of strep; other common forms of strep that cause different infections in humans include "group B strep" and "group D strep." Group A strep usually lives peacefully among the many other types of bacteria growing on our skin and doesn't cause any problems, until we get a break in the skin such as a cut or a scrape. This allows it to overwhelm the immune system's ability to keep it in check.

Group A strep can also live in the back of the throat – up to 30% of people without any evidence of a sore throat will have this strain in their throat. Up to 3 in 10 children and 1 in 10 adults feeling sick with a sore throat due to a virus or other cause will test positive for group A strep. That means that people with a sore throat caused by a virus could also be positive for strep, even if it's not causing the symptoms.

Not all group A strep bacteria are the same, though. Some varieties are better at evading the immune system than others and can grow quickly. Others produce byproducts that can cause a sore throat and sometimes lead to tonsillitis, an infection of the tonsils, or cause ear or sinus infections.

» READ MORE: Medical mystery: A family's repeated strep throat infections frustrated their doctors

Still other strep strains produce a toxin that can cause a characteristic skin rash or lead to effects on the heart, kidneys or even the brain.

Rarer still, group A strep can enter the bloodstream and cause toxic shock syndrome, a life-threatening, overwhelming infection. These latter conditions are examples of invasive strep, meaning that the infection is in parts of the body typically free from germs; they seem to be on the rise after a marked reduction in their occurrence during the COVID-19 pandemic.

To test or not to test

Doctors or other clinicians can easily test for strep by using a swab to collect a bit of the fluid from the back of the throat. This sample can identify group A strep in about a minute.

While researchers have been studying group A strep for over 75 years and there are thousands of research papers focused on infections caused by strep, there is still controversy over whether it needs to be tested for and treated.

To decide whether to test for group A strep, clinicians use a set of criteria based on five questions that can help determine whether strep testing is needed. These are:

  • How old is the patient? Strep throat is most common in children between ages 5 and 15 and least common in adults over age 45.

  • Are the tonsils swollen or do they have a white or yellow coating? Both conditions often accompany strep. However, this question alone isn't definitive, since viruses can also affect the tonsils.

  • Are the cervical lymph nodes swollen or tender? Normally these bumps, which are in the front of the neck along the sides of the windpipe, cannot be seen or felt, but are often palpable when strep is present.

  • Does the person have a fever? Lack of a fever makes strep less likely.

  • Does the person have a cough? A cough is indicative of a viral cause and makes strep the less likely cause of the sore throat.

  • While none of these questions alone can provide a clear answer, taken together they can tell your clinician whether strep is more or less likely.

    Using this scoring tool, an adult with a sore throat but without changes to the tonsils or lymph nodes, without a fever and with a cough has only a 1 in 40 chance, or 2.5%, of having strep throat. For such patients, a strep test is not necessary.

    On the other hand, when a first grader meets all five of these criteria, there is a 50% chance that strep is causing his or her sore throat. Based on recent research I have reviewed, by using these questions adults can determine when strep is the likely cause of a sore throat.

    In the United Kingdom and other European countries, doctors do not routinely test for strep. Antibiotic treatment can at times cause allergic reactions, rash, diarrhea, stomach upset, yeast infections and other side effects. Authorities in these countries feel any benefit of testing and treatment does not outweigh these risks.

    Treatments for strep

    Once group A strep is confirmed, doctors may prescribe an antibiotic treatment.

    Penicillin or amoxicillin are the most commonly prescribed antibiotics for strep. These medicines will not reduce pain or tiredness but may help symptoms resolve earlier, typically by about a day. Doctors may also suggest use of a pain reliever such as acetaminophen or ibuprofen to help relieve symptoms.

    Antibiotic treatment does not seem to lower the likelihood of spread of the infection between children — which is common in schools and dormitories — or adults.

    Health care practitioners recommend staying home until fever has subsided. They also recommend taking the full course of antibiotics, even if the symptoms have abated.

    With sore throats causes by viruses — against which antibiotics are ineffective — few treatments exist aside from using pain relievers to help soothe immediate symptoms. For this reason and because antibiotic overuse is a major problem in the U.S., it is best not to assume that your sore throat is caused by strep and to treat it accordingly.

    Allen Shaughnessy is a professor of family medicine at Tufts University.

    This article is republished from The Conversation. Read the original article here.


    Killer Virus Warning Signs Include Spotty Rash In Mouth As Cases Spread Across Europe

    Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic-fever, or CCHF, is spreading through Europe, with experts warning the potentially fatal virus is "highly likely" to reach the UK soon.

    The infection causes a range of symptoms, including an unpleasant rash which can affect three different parts of the body. The common warning sign is key to look out for, with the virus having already killed people infected in Iraq, Pakistan and Namibia.

    A painful rash appearing on the skin, in the mouth and in the throat is a sign of infection, with the symptom caused by bleeding in these areas, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

    "Clinical signs include tachycardia (fast heart rate), lymphadenopathy (enlarged lymph nodes), and a petechial rash (a rash caused by bleeding into the skin) on internal mucosal surfaces, such as in the mouth and throat, and on the skin. The petechiae may give way to larger rashes called ecchymoses, and other haemorrhagic phenomena", the WHO website reads.

    The red dots appearing on the skin are caused by broken blood vessels under the skin, reports the Mirror.

    James Wood, head of veterinary medicine at Cambridge University, last week warning that CCHF is likely to find its way to the UK "through out ticks, at some point".

    Experts are also concerned that climate change is aiding the spread of virus such as this one, with the creatures making their way to new territories - such as the UK - as temperatures increase.

    The virus has worried experts as fatality rates in hospitalised patients range from nine per cent to as high as 50 per cent.

    Most Read {{#articles}} {{/articles}}

    There is also uncertainty over the long term effects of the infection, with a lack of studies into the potential complications suffered by survivors.

    However, it is known that recovery from the infection is slow.

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    The virus can be passed on from human-to-human through close contract with blood, secretions, organs or other bodily fluids of infected persons.

    Animals before infected when bitten by an infected tick, with the virus remaining in the bloodstream for around a week following exposure. This means tick-animal-tick infection can occur, with ticks biting the infected animal to become infected themselves.

    Show more

    WHO's website adds: "It is difficult to prevent or control CCHF infection in animals and ticks as the tick-animal-tick cycle usually goes unnoticed and the infection in domestic animals is usually not apparent.

    "Furthermore, the tick vectors are numerous and widespread, so tick control with acaricides (chemicals intended to kill ticks) is only a realistic option for well-managed livestock production facilities."

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    Ulcer At Corner Of Mouth As First Sign Of Infection With Monkeypox Virus

    LNSLNS

    A 51-year-old HIV-positive patient presented to his general practitioner with a vesicle at the left corner of the mouth which had appeared the day before. He had no clinical signs of infection; his HIV infection had been well controlled for years, both virologically and immunologically, with antiretroviral therapy. Initially, the patient received a topical combination ointment for treatment. Within a few days, the patient developed a painful ulcer at the left oral commissure. He then consulted his general practitioner again where a swab was taken from the ulcer. Using polymerase chain reaction (PCR), monkeypox virus was detected. Subsequently, an increase in monkeypox vesicles was noted on the skin, but also on the palate. With growing swelling of the base of the tongue and muffled speech, it was decided to admit the patient to hospital for antiviral treatment with tecovirimat. Under the treatment, symptoms eventually resolved rapidly. After four days, the patient could be discharged home. This case highlights that patients with recent monkeypox virus infection may initially have less pronounced clinical symptoms with no signs of infection and only few vesicles on the skin.

    Dr. Med. Stefan Schlabe, PD Dr. Med. Christoph Boesecke, Medizinische Klinik I, Universitätsklinikum Bonn, christoph.Boesecke@ukbonn.De

    Julia Isselstein, Praxis am Ebertplatz, Köln

    Conflict of interest statement: The authors declare that no conflict of interest exists.

    Translated from the original German by Ralf Thoene, MD.

    Cite this as: Schlabe S, Isselstein J, Boesecke C: Ulcer at corner of mouth as first sign of infection with monkeypox virus. Dtsch Arztebl Int 2022; 119: 511. DOI: 10.3238/arztebl.M2022.0274






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