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According to the Mayo Clinic, strep throat is one of the top four infectious illnesses that keep kids home from school.
(The others being colds, stomach flu and “pink eye,” or conjunctivitis.)
While strep throat may be a common childhood ailment, it’s also a serious condition that must be carefully watched.
The parents of eight-year-old Myhki have brought him to the E-R. Along with a bad sore throat, Myhki has fever, headache and difficulty swallowing. There’s also inflammation, as displayed by red and white patches in Myhki’s throat and on his tongue.
According to Dr. Lonnie King, with Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, that coating is sometimes called “strawberry tongue.”
Myhki is tested for strep throat – an infection caused by the streptococcus bacteria. The test comes back positive.
The good thing about it is that, it is something we can do something about,” says Dr. King. “We can give him antibiotics and he should be fine within 24, 48 hours.”
Left untreated, strep throat can lead to rheumatic fever – which can inflame and scar heart tissue, damage the heart’s valves and eventually cause congestive heart failure.
“Our biggest goal to prevent rheumatic fever,” says Dr. King, “so these children don’t need valve replacements in ten or fifteen or twenty years. So that’s the reason that I encourage parents to have their children checked – to make sure it’s not strep, because you want to treat all as many cases of strep as you can, to prevent long-term…pretty terrible consequences down the road. “
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