Uncommon Systemic Manifestation of Group A Beta-Hemolytic Streptococcus in a Middle-Aged Woman: A Case Report
Tetsuya Akaishi

TL;DR
A middle-aged woman experienced a rare systemic reaction to a GABHS infection, showing symptoms like sore throat, rash, and joint swelling, which resolved with antibiotic treatment.
Contribution
Highlights a rare systemic manifestation of GABHS in adults, emphasizing the need for broader diagnostic consideration.
Findings
The patient showed symptoms resembling rheumatic fever despite normal WBC, CRP, and ASO levels.
Treatment with clarithromycin and amoxicillin resolved all symptoms.
Echocardiogram revealed mitral valve calcification and mild regurgitation.
Abstract
Group A beta-hemolytic Streptococcus (GABHS) is a gram-positive type of bacteria, typically causing high fever and painful pharyngitis. The bacteria may sometimes trigger widespread skin rash in children, but systemic conditions other than sore throat are rare in adult patients with the infection. A 57-year-old woman visited our hospital with a sore throat, pruritic skin rash in the body trunk, painful oral ulcer, swollen lips, arthralgia, and swollen left wrist joint with pain. She had a recent similar clinical episode approximately four weeks before the hospital visit, which was alleviated with oral loxoprofen. The swelling of the left wrist had migrated from the left elbow area in the preceding four weeks. The patient had similar symptoms about 30 years ago, which were diagnosed with GABHS infection and successfully treated with oral antibiotics. Based on this past similar clinical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStreptococcal Infections and Treatments · Neonatal and Maternal Infections · Bacterial Identification and Susceptibility Testing
