Respiratory System Conditions

Subtopic:

Acute pharyngitis

Acute pharyngitis

  • Acute pharyngitis is an inflammatory syndrome of the pharynx and/ortonsils caused by several different groups of
  • Most common throat disorder
  • Usua ly subsides in 3 to 10 daysunless complications

Etiology of Acute pharyngitis

  • Viral or bacterialinfection
  • Beta-hemolytic streptococcus (15%to 20% of acute pharyngitis cases).
  • Mononucleosis
  • Streptococcus bacterial infections(in children)
  • Candida infection is common as a source of sore throat in immunocompromised individuals, including those undergoing chemotherapy or oropharyngeal irradiation for

.

Pathophysiology

  • Acute pharyngitis results from infection and inflammation of the pharynx, the details of which are both pathogen- and host-
  • Most commonly the disease is localized to the pharynx alone, but rarely it may be part of a systemic infection (e.g., infectious mononucleosis, tularemia, or HIV).

Incidence of Acute pharyngitis

  • Widespread among adults who:
  • Live or work in dusty or
  • Uses their voice excessively
  • Use tobacco or alcohol habitually
  • Suffer from chronic sinusitis, persistent coughs, or a l

Clinical manifestations of Acute pharyngitis

History

  1. Sore throat
  2. Slight difficulty swallowing
  3. Sensation of lump in thethroat
  4. Content aggravating urge to swallow
  5. Headache
  6. Muscles and joint pain

Test Results

  • Lab (throat culture, rapid strep test & WBC)
  • Imaging (CTallocate theabscess)

Risk Factors of Acute pharyngitis

  • nasal colonization with group AStreptococcus (GAS)
  • GAS-infected contact
  • sexual activity or abuse
  • ingestion of nondomestic meats
  • immunocompromised host
  • use of inhaled corticosteroids
  • lack of immunization or vaccinefailure
  • chemotherapy or oropharyngeal irradiation for cancer

Risk Factors of Acute pharyngitis

  • nasal colonization with group AStreptococcus (GAS)
  • GAS-infected contact
  • sexual activity or abuse
  • ingestion of nondomestic meats
  • immunocompromised host
  • use of inhaled corticosteroids
  • lack of immunization or vaccinefailure
  • chemotherapy or oropharyngeal irradiation for cancer

Risk Factors of Acute pharyngitis

  • nasal colonization with group AStreptococcus (GAS)
  • GAS-infected contact
  • sexual activity or abuse
  • ingestion of nondomestic meats
  • immunocompromised host
  • use of inhaled corticosteroids
  • lack of immunization or vaccinefailure
  • chemotherapy or oropharyngeal irradiation for cancer

Complications

  • Otitis media
  • Sinusitis
  • Mastoiditis
  • Rheumatic fever
  • Nephritis

Treatment of acutepharyngitis

  • General (warm saline gargles, hospitalization for dehydration, elimination of the underlying cause & adequatehumidification)
  • Diet (adequate diet, avoidance of citrus juices, easy toswallow food)
  • Activity (bed rest while febrile)
  • Medications( anesthetic throat lozenges, analgesics as needed, antibiotics, antifungal agents, antipyretics and equine antitoxins)
  • Surgical (abscess drainage)

Nursing consideration

  • Nursing diagnosis (acute pain, fatigue, imbalance nutrition; less than body requirements, impaired oral mucous membrane or risk for deficient fluid volume)
  • Outcomes (the pt will express feeling of increase comfort decreased pain, verbalizes importance of adequate daily calorie intake , maintain intact mucous membranes or maintain normal fluid volume)
  • Nursing interventions (administer medication as orders, throat culture as orders, instruct pt to use a warm saline gargles, encourage adequate oral fluid intake and perform meticulous moth care and maintain as restful environment

Patient teaching

  • Be sure to cover :
    • Disorder, diagnostic test and treatment
    • Importance of completing prescribed antibiotic therapy
    • Adverse reactions to medications
    • Avoidance of excessive exposure toair conditioning
    • Smoking cessation
    • Ways to minimize environmental sources of throat irritation
    • Importance of throat cultures
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