Welcome to NGC. Skip directly to: Search Box, Navigation, Content.


Brief Summary

GUIDELINE TITLE

Tonsillitis and pharyngitis in children.

BIBLIOGRAPHIC SOURCE(S)

  • Finnish Medical Society Duodecim. Tonsillitis and pharyngitis in children. In: EBM Guidelines. Evidence-Based Medicine [Internet]. Helsinki, Finland: Wiley Interscience. John Wiley & Sons; 2007 May 30 [Various].

GUIDELINE STATUS

This is the current release of the guideline.

This guideline updates a previous version: Finnish Medical Society Duodecim. Tonsillitis and pharyngitis in children. In: EBM Guidelines. Evidence-Based Medicine [Internet]. Helsinki, Finland: Wiley Interscience. John Wiley & Sons; 2005 Oct 30 [Various]. [1 reference]

BRIEF SUMMARY CONTENT

 
RECOMMENDATIONS
 EVIDENCE SUPPORTING THE RECOMMENDATIONS
 IDENTIFYING INFORMATION AND AVAILABILITY
 DISCLAIMER

 Go to the Complete Summary

RECOMMENDATIONS

MAJOR RECOMMENDATIONS

The levels of evidence [A-D] supporting the recommendations are defined at the end of the "Major Recommendations" field.

Basic Rules

  • Antibiotics are indicated in infections caused by group A streptococci diagnosed by culture or rapid antigen test. Symptomatic treatment is indicated in other cases.
  • Infectious mononucleosis presents with only mild symptoms in small children. Treatment with antibiotics is of no use, but a course of amoxicillin during the disease will provoke a red-spotted rash in almost every patient.
  • Epidemics caused by streptococci should be identified and managed. Contaminated food and milk are known to cause streptococcal epidemic.

Aetiology

  • Adenoviruses are the most common aetiological agents.
  • Streptococcal pharyngitis is rare in children below 3 years of age.

Symptoms and Signs

  • Fever and sore throat are the main symptoms associated with streptococcal infection, but clinical diagnosis is unreliable.
    • Adenoviruses and other viruses can cause exudative tonsillitis.
    • In two thirds of school-aged children with streptococcal tonsillitis there is no exudate.
  • If a patient with recent onset fever and sore throat also has cough and rhinitis, a viral respiratory infection is far more probable than streptococcal infection.
  • Sore throat with rash is often caused by adenoviruses or other viruses.
  • Ear pain may radiate to the tonsillar region (and vice versa).
  • Streptococcal pharyngitis may cause abdominal pain.

Diagnostics

  • Diagnosis should be based on the detection of streptococci in pharyngeal secretions by culture or rapid antigen test (see picture 1 in the original guideline document). Bacteria other than streptococci need not be sought.
  • A rapid culture method (Streptocult®) will give a result the next morning (see Finnish Medical Society Duodecim guideline "Throat Bacterial Swab."). If a rapid antigen test is used, a negative result should be verified by culture. (In children below 3 years of age streptococcal tonsillitis is so rare that a negative antigen test need not be controlled by culture.)

Treatment

  • Fever and pain are best treated with paracetamol. Naproxen and ibuprofen are alternatives. Infections caused by group A streptococci should be treated with penicillin V, 70 mg/kg/day (100,000 units/kg/day), or (in patients with penicillin allergy) cephalexin, 50 mg/kg/day, in two doses for 10 days (Deeter et al., 1992) [A].
  • Because of infectiousness the child should be isolated from day care or school for one day after the onset of antibiotic treatment. The length of absence from day care or school is determined by the general condition and not by the aetiological agent.

Definitions:

Levels of Evidence

  1. Quality of Evidence: High

    Further research is very unlikely to change confidence in the estimate of effect

    • Several high-quality studies with consistent results
    • In special cases: one large, high-quality multi-centre trial
  1. Quality of Evidence: Moderate

    Further research is likely to have an important impact on confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate.

    • One high-quality study
    • Several studies with some limitations
  1. Quality of Evidence: Low

    Further research is very likely to have an important impact on confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate.

    • One or more studies with severe limitations
  1. Quality of Evidence: Very Low

    Any estimate of effect is very uncertain.

    • Expert opinion
    • No direct research evidence
    • One or more studies with very severe limitations

CLINICAL ALGORITHM(S)

None provided

EVIDENCE SUPPORTING THE RECOMMENDATIONS

REFERENCES SUPPORTING THE RECOMMENDATIONS

TYPE OF EVIDENCE SUPPORTING THE RECOMMENDATIONS

Concise summaries of scientific evidence attached to the individual guidelines are the unique feature of the Evidence-Based Medicine Guidelines. The evidence summaries allow the clinician to judge how well-founded the treatment recommendations are. The type of supporting evidence is identified and graded for select recommendations (see the "Major Recommendations" field).

IDENTIFYING INFORMATION AND AVAILABILITY

BIBLIOGRAPHIC SOURCE(S)

  • Finnish Medical Society Duodecim. Tonsillitis and pharyngitis in children. In: EBM Guidelines. Evidence-Based Medicine [Internet]. Helsinki, Finland: Wiley Interscience. John Wiley & Sons; 2007 May 30 [Various].

ADAPTATION

Not applicable: The guideline was not adapted from another source.

DATE RELEASED

2004 Apr 21 (revised 2007 May 30)

GUIDELINE DEVELOPER(S)

Finnish Medical Society Duodecim - Professional Association

SOURCE(S) OF FUNDING

Finnish Medical Society Duodecim

GUIDELINE COMMITTEE

Editorial Team of EBM Guidelines

COMPOSITION OF GROUP THAT AUTHORED THE GUIDELINE

Primary Author: Marjukka Mäkelä

FINANCIAL DISCLOSURES/CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

Not stated

GUIDELINE STATUS

This is the current release of the guideline.

This guideline updates a previous version: Finnish Medical Society Duodecim. Tonsillitis and pharyngitis in children. In: EBM Guidelines. Evidence-Based Medicine [Internet]. Helsinki, Finland: Wiley Interscience. John Wiley & Sons; 2005 Oct 30 [Various]. [1 reference]

GUIDELINE AVAILABILITY

AVAILABILITY OF COMPANION DOCUMENTS

None available

PATIENT RESOURCES

None available

NGC STATUS

This NGC summary was completed by ECRI on August 31, 2005. This summary was updated by ECRI on March 17, 2006, and on January 8, 2008.

COPYRIGHT STATEMENT

This NGC summary is based on the original guideline, which is subject to the guideline developer's copyright restrictions.

DISCLAIMER

NGC DISCLAIMER

The National Guideline Clearinghouse™ (NGC) does not develop, produce, approve, or endorse the guidelines represented on this site.

All guidelines summarized by NGC and hosted on our site are produced under the auspices of medical specialty societies, relevant professional associations, public or private organizations, other government agencies, health care organizations or plans, and similar entities.

Guidelines represented on the NGC Web site are submitted by guideline developers, and are screened solely to determine that they meet the NGC Inclusion Criteria which may be found at http://www.guideline.gov/about/inclusion.aspx .

NGC, AHRQ, and its contractor ECRI Institute make no warranties concerning the content or clinical efficacy or effectiveness of the clinical practice guidelines and related materials represented on this site. Moreover, the views and opinions of developers or authors of guidelines represented on this site do not necessarily state or reflect those of NGC, AHRQ, or its contractor ECRI Institute, and inclusion or hosting of guidelines in NGC may not be used for advertising or commercial endorsement purposes.

Readers with questions regarding guideline content are directed to contact the guideline developer.


 

 

   
DHHS Logo