HEAD, EYE, EAR, NOSE, AND THROAT
EMERGENCIES
COMPLICATIONS
■ Scarlet fever: Sand paper rash
■ Rheumatic fever: A combination of carditis, arthritis, and dermatologic
findings seen 2–6 weeks after strep pharyngitis
■ Seen rarely today because of the use of antibiotics
■ Abscess formation or mastoiditis (see Figure 14.20)
■ Poststrep glomerulonephritis (not prevented with antibiotics)
Peritonsillar Abscess
ETIOLOGY
■ Classically a complication of group A streptococcal pharyngitis
■ Adolescents or young adults (rare in children <12 years old)
■ Most common deep HEENT infection
SYMPTOMS/EXAM
■ Severe sore throat and odynophagia
■ Fever, trismus, and drooling
■ Hot potato voice (dysarthria)
■ Tender peritonsillar mass that displaces the uvula and soft palate medially
■ Peritonsillar cellulitis will have minimal or no trismus and no fluctuance.
DIAGNOSIS
■ Clinical
■ CT with contrast (1- to 3-mm cuts) if unsure or to assess for presence of
lateral or retropharyngeal abscess
TREATMENT
■ Needle aspiration and/or I+D
■ Outpatient antibiotics if nontoxic and tolerating PO
FIGURE 14.20. Peritonsillar abscess.
(Reproduced, with permission, from Stone CK, Humphries RL. Current Diagnosis & Treatment : Emergency
Medicine, 6th ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2008:523 and 532.)
A
Needle aspiration sites for
peritonsillar abscess
Palatoglossal arch
Palatopharyngeal arch
Posterior wall of
oral pharynx
1
2
3
B