Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-19 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 6, 2007 17:50


1384 Streptococcal Infections

■Prompt evaluation for surgical exploration in cases of suspected
necrotizing fasciitis can be life-saving

General Measures
■General supportive care

specific therapy
Treatment Options
■The antibiotic of choice for serious streptococcal infections remains
penicillin, with some exceptions.
■For serious streptococcal skin infections, may need to treat as pos-
sible staphylococcal infection (Cefazolin 500 mg IV TID or with Naf-
cillin 1.5 g IV QID). Treat with parental antibiotics for facial erysi-
pelas: Penicillin 2 million units IV q4h. For patients with serious
penicillin allergy, Vancomycin1gIVq12h is used.
■In necrotizing fasciitis and other conditions that lead to strepto-
coccal toxic shock syndrome, some advocate the addition of clin-
damycin (may suppress exotoxin production by group A streptococ-
cus).
■For endocarditis caused by the viridans streptococci and S. bovis,
gentamicin is added for the duration of therapy at synergistic doses
(1 mg/kg IV q8h for 4–6 weeks)
■For S. pneumoniae, increasing penicillin-resistance (MIC > 0.1) may
necessitate high-dose penicillin therapy. High level resistance (MIC
> 2.0) should be treated with Ceftriaxone or a fluoroquinolone such
as levofloxacin.
■In meningitis, Vancomycin is now indicated as empiric therapy with
Ceftriaxone, given the increasing prevalence of penicillin-resistant
pneumococcus.
■In streptococcal pharyngitis, therapy has a minimal effect on reso-
lution of symptoms but prevent complications; consider treatment
if clinical suspicion high even before definitive diagnosis by culture;
benzathine penicillin G 1.2 million units IM X1 is preferred or peni-
cillin V potassium 500 mg po QID for 10 days
■Control of rheumatic fever involves both treatment of primary strep-
tococcal pharyngitis and secondary prevention of recurrent disease;
patients who have had rheumatic fever need prophylaxis for at least
5 years (1.2 million unit q 4 weeks IM or 250 mg po BID)

follow-up
■Routine follow-up depending on the disease
Free download pdf