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THE MERCK MANUAL MEDICAL LIBRARY: The Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy
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PFAPA Syndrome (periodic fevers with aphthous stomatitis, pharyngitis, and adenitis)

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PFAPA (periodic fevers with aphthous stomatitis, pharyngitis, and adenitis) syndrome is a periodic fever syndrome that typically manifests between ages 2 and 5 yr; it is characterized by febrile episodes lasting 3 to 6 days, pharyngitis, aphthous ulcers, and adenopathy. Etiology and pathophysiology are undefined.

PFAPA syndrome is a relatively common periodic fever in children. Although genetic causes have not been determined, this syndrome tends to be grouped with hereditary fever syndromes. It typically starts in early childhood (between ages 2 and 5 yr) and tends to be more common among males.

Febrile episodes last 3 to 6 days and recur about every 28 days. The syndrome causes fatigue, chills, and occasionally abdominal pain and headache, as well as fever, pharyngitis, aphthous ulcers, and lymphadenopathy. Patients are healthy between episodes, and growth is normal.

Diagnosis

Diagnosis is based on clinical findings, which include the following:

  • 3 febrile episodes, lasting up to 5 days and occurring at regular intervals
  • Pharyngitis plus adenopathy or aphthous ulcers
  • Good health between episodes and normal growth

Acute-phase reactants (eg, C-reactive protein, ESR) are elevated during a febrile episode but not between episodes. Neutropenia or other symptoms (eg, diarrhea, rash, cough) are not present; their presence suggests a different disorder.

Treatment

Treatment is optional; it can include glucocorticoids, cimetidine Some Trade Names
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, and, rarely, tonsillectomy. Patients tend to outgrow this syndrome without sequelae.

Last full review/revision January 2009 by Stephen E. Goldfinger, MD

Content last modified January 2009

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