DISPOSITION
- Patients with a stable injury, in an appropriate splint, may be discharged for orthopedic follow-up and possible repeat imaging in 1 wk time.
ALERT
Emergent orthopedic consult is required for:
- Amputation
- Open joint injuries or fractures
- Digital neurovascular compromise
- Signs of joint infection or infectious tenosynovitis
- High-pressure injection injury
- Urgent orthopedic consult:
- Unstable fractures (rotational deformity, oblique or angulated fractures, joint involvement, epiphyseal injuries)
- Any joint dislocation with tendon rupture
- Digit dislocation that is irreducible
- Unstable joint after attempted dislocation reduction
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Rotational deformity may not be apparent if finger is straight, exam under flexion is required.
- Jersey finger (FDP tendon rupture) is often misdiagnosed as a “jammed” or sprained finger, but requires more urgent management than these minor injuries.
- Always check for stability postreduction by having patient perform active range of motion and checking a postreduction x-ray.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Oetgen ME, Dodds SD. Non-operative treatment of common finger injuries.
Curr Rev Musculoskelet Med.
2008;1:97–102.
- Okike K, Bhattacharyya T. Trends in the management of open fractures. A critical analysis.
J Bone Joint Surg Am.
2006;88:2739–2748.
- Pang HN, Teoh LC, Yam AK, et al. Factors affecting the prognosis of pyogenic flexor tenosynovitis.
J Bone Joint Surg Am.
2007;89:1742–1748.
- Tuttle HG, Olvey SP, Stern PJ. Tendon avulsion injuries of the distal phalanx.
Clin Orthop Relat Res.
2006;445:157–168.
CODES
ICD9
- 816.00 Closed fracture of phalanx or phalanges of hand, unspecified
- 834.00 Closed dislocation of finger, unspecified part
- 959.5 Finger injury
ICD10
- S62.609A Fracture of unsp phalanx of unsp finger, init for clos fx
- S63.259A Unspecified dislocation of unspecified finger, init encntr
- S69.90XA Unsp injury of unsp wrist, hand and finger(s), init encntr
PHARYNGITIS
John C. Greenwood
•
Brian J. Browne
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Inflammation/infection of the pharynx
- 3rd most common complaint for physician visits
- 30 million cases diagnosed annually
- Group A β-hemolytic streptococcus (GAS):
- Streptococcus pyogenes
- Unusual in children <3 yr old
- Cause of 20–30% of childhood pharyngitis
- Bimodal incidence, highest in ages 5–7 and 12–13 yr
- Cause of 5–15% of adult pharyngitis
- Peak months: January–May; also at the start of the school year
ETIOLOGY
- Viral (most common infectious cause):
- Rhinovirus (20%)
- Coronavirus (>5%)
- Adenovirus (5%)
- Herpes simplex virus (4%)
- Parainfluenza virus (2%)
- Influenza virus (2%)
- Coxsackievirus (<1%)
- Epstein–Barr virus (<1%)
- Acute human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
- Bacterial:
- GAS (
S. pyogenes
[15–30%])
- Fusobacterium necrophorum
(10%)
- Group C & G β-hemolytic streptococcus (5%)
- Neisseria gonorrhea
(<1%)
- Corynebacterium diphtheriae
(<1%)
- Arcanobacterium haemolyticum
(<1%)
- Chlamydia pneumoniae
- Mycoplasma pneumoniae
(<1%)
- Syphilis
- Tuberculosis
- Fungal:
- Chemical burns
- Foreign bodies
- Inhalants
- Postnasal drip
- Malignancy
- GERD
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
- Viral:
- Cough
- Rhinorrhea
- Sore throat usually follows
- Have a high suspicion for acute HIV in at-risk patients presenting with persistent pharyngitis despite treatment
- Bacterial:
- Sudden-onset sore throat that usually precedes other symptoms
- Odynophagia
- Fever
- Headache
- Abdominal pain
- Nausea and vomiting
- Uncharacteristic symptoms:
Physical-Exam
- High-risk features for a serious complication of pharyngitis:
- Stridor, respiratory distress
- Drooling
- Dysphonia
- Marked neck swelling
- Neurologic dysfunction
- Viral:
- Cough
- Coryza
- Rhinorrhea
- Pharyngeal erythema
- Gingivostomatitis
- GAS:
- Tonsillopharyngeal erythema/exudates
- Soft palatal petechiae
- Beefy red, swollen uvula
- Anterior cervical lymphadenopathy
- Scarlatiniform rash
- Uncharacteristic signs:
- Conjunctivitis
- Anterior stomatitis
- Discrete ulcerative lesions
- Mononucleosis:
- Mistaken for GAS due to similar presentation:
- Exudative pharyngitis
- Tender cervical lymphadenopathy
- Fever
- Rash
- Other possible exam findings:
- Hepatosplenomegaly
- Jaundice
- Diphtheria:
- Consider in nonimmunized patients
- Airway-threatening gray pharyngeal membrane
- Myocarditis (2/3 of patients); clinically evident cardiac dysfunction (10–25%)
- Cranial and peripheral neuropathies (5%)
- Gonococcal pharyngitis:
- Can be asymptomatic
- Always evaluate children for sexual abuse
- Recurrent episodes of pharyngitis
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
Modified Center criteria for the diagnosis of GAS pharyngitis (most widely used decision rule):
- Criteria (points):
- Absence of cough (+1)
- Tonsillar exudates or swelling (+1)
- Swollen and tender anterior cervical nodes (+1)
- Temperature >38ºC (+1)
- Age in years:
- 3–14 (+1)
- 15–44 (0)
- >45 (–1)
- Scoring:
- <1 should not be tested or treated
- 3 is associated with a risk of 28–35%
- >4 is associated with a risk of 51–53%
- Patients with 3 criteria should receive a rapid antigen detection test (RADT)
- Presumptive treatment without testing has led to inappropriate use of antibiotics in about 50% of cases
- Some suggest that patients with a score >4 should be treated empirically without a RADT
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- Throat culture:
- Gold standard
- 24–48 hr for results, will delay treatment
- Necessitates contacting patient/family
- Obtain when
Gonococcus
is suspected
- GAS RADT:
- Results are available within 30 min
- Treat all patients with (+) RADT results
- Technique: Performed by swabbing the tonsils or posterior pharynx:
- Avoid contact with the tongue, buccal mucosa, and lips
- Sensitivity 85–95%
- Specificity 96–99%:
- Confirm with conventional throat culture in children/adolescents with negative RADT
- Optical immunoassay is extremely accurate; negative results do not require confirmatory culture
- Monospot:
- Detects heterophil antibody:
- Sensitivity:
- <2 yr old: <30%
- 2–4 yr old: 75%
- >5 yr old: 90%
- CBC with peripheral smear: 50% lymphocytes, 10% atypical lymphocytes
- Obtain rapid viral loads if HIV is suspected
Imaging
- Lateral neck radiograph for suspected epiglottitis, retropharyngeal abscess, or foreign body
- Contrast-enhanced CT of the neck is useful to identify complications such as peritonsilar abscess and retropharyngeal abscess
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Epiglottitis
- Peritonsillar/retropharyngeal abscess
- Diphtheria
- Mononucleosis
- Lemierre disease
- Ludwig angina
- Candida
infection
- Gonorrhea
- Acute HIV infection
- Acute leukemia/lymphoma
- Oropharyngeal cancer
- Foreign body
- Inhalants and chemical burns
- Postnasal drip
- GERD
TREATMENT