Scenario 1: Let's take a look at Jenifer signs and symptoms first:
Jennifer has been “running a temperature” for the last 3 days. She started to get fussy, would not eat her breakfast, and would not sit still for her
...
Scenario 1: Let's take a look at Jenifer signs and symptoms first:
Jennifer has been “running a temperature” for the last 3 days. She started to get fussy, would not eat her breakfast, and would not sit still for her favorite television cartoon. Since then she has had a fever off and on, anywhere between 101 of and today’s high of 103.2oF. After given Ibuprophen, fever went up to 103.2oF. Today, she felt that she should come in for evaluation. .
Her skin is hot and dry. The tympanic membranes are slightly reddened on the periphery. The throat is erythematous with 4+ tonsils and diffuse exudates. Anterior cervical nodes are readily palpable and clearly tender to touch on the left side. The child indicates that her throat hurts “a lot” and it is painful to swallow. Vital signs reveal a temperature of 102.8oF, a pulse of 128 beats per minute, and a respiratory rate of 24 beats per minute.
The diagnosis is: Sore Throat-Pharyngitis Sore Throat-Pharyngitis
Sore throat is a common problem during childhood and is usually the result of a bacterial or viral infection. Although sore throat usually resolves without complications, it sometimes requires
treatment with an antibiotic. There are some less common causes of sore throat that are serious or even life-threatening.
GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS-Pathophysiology
Streptococcus pyogenes is a facultative, gram-positive coccus that grows in chains. It causes an array of infections involving the respiratory tract and soft tissues ranging in severity from mild to severe. The only known reservoirs are the skin and mucous membranes of the human host. The pathogenic mechanisms underlying these infections are poorly understood, largely because each is the culmination of highly complex interactions between the human host defense mechanisms and specific virulence factors of the organism.
MICROBIOLOGIC CHARACTERISTICS
Group A Streptococcus (GAS) requires complex media containing blood products. It grows best in an environment of 10 percent carbon dioxide and produces pinpoint colonies on blood agar plates; these are surrounded by a zone of complete (beta) hemolysis.
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