Viral parotitis: Difference between revisions

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*[[Sialolithiasis]]
*[[Sialolithiasis]]


===Bilateral parotitis===
{{Bilateral parotitis DDX}}
{{Bilateral parotitis DDX}}
{{Facial swelling DDX}}


==Treatment==
==Treatment==

Revision as of 21:45, 15 January 2015

Background

  • Acute infection of the parotid glands
  • Most often caused by the mumps virus; less commonly by influenza, parainfluenza, coxsackie, echo, HIV
  • Most common in children <15yrs
  • Contagious for 9d after onset of parotid swelling

Clinical Features

  • Prodrome of fever, malaise, HA, myalgias, arthralgias
  • Unilateral or bilateral parotid swelling
  • Unilateral orchitis (20-30% of male pts)

Differential Diagnosis

Bilateral Parotitis

Facial Swelling

Treatment

  • Supportive

Complications

  • Mastitis, pancreatitis, aseptic meningitis, hearing loss, myocarditis, polyarthritis, hemolytic anemia

Disposition

  • Isolated parotitis or orchitis: manage as outpatient
  • Sysemtic complications: admit

See Also

Salivary Gland Infections

Source

Tintinalli