University of Crete

education 📍 Rethymno, Greece
University of Crete
2
PFAPA Syndrome Publications
2
PFAPA Syndrome Researchers

Associated Institutions

University Hospital of Heraklion
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Publications

Periodic Fever, Aphthous Stomatitis, Pharyngitis and Adenitis Syndrome: An Update.

Michailou M, Perdikogianni C
Children (Basel, Switzerland)

Periodic Fever, Aphthous Stomatitis, Pharyngitis and Adenitis (PFAPA) syndrome is an autoinflammatory disorder of unknown genetic etiology typically characterized by recurrent fever episodes, pharyngitis, aphthous stomatitis and cervical lymphadenitis. The syndrome runs a benign course with fever episodes recurring in regular intervals and usually resolves around adolescence, even though, for a subset of patients, it persists through adulthood. It is considered a condition of multifactorial etiology, a syndrome that is triggered by environmental factors in genetically predisposed individuals. Increasing evidence points towards a correlation between monogenic autoinflammatory syndromes and PFAPA syndrome both in pathogenesis and therapeutic approaches. In this review, we present an update of the current literature on PFAPA and focus on new data on genetics of PFAPA and the association of PFAPA with other autoinflammatory diseases.

PFAPA syndrome in children evaluated for tonsillectomy.

Galanakis E, Papadakis CE, Giannoussi E, Karatzanis AD, Bitsori M , et al.
Archives of disease in childhood

Among 40 children undergoing tonsillectomy for recurrent pharyngitis, 15 (37.5%) had presented preoperatively with complaints compatible with PFAPA syndrome. All 15 had had periodic fever every three to four weeks and pharyngitis; 12 (80%) had cervical adenitis and five (33%) aphthous stomatitis. All children had been well between episodes and showed a dramatic postoperative improvement. PFAPA syndrome is not uncommon among children having tonsillectomy. Tonsillectomy is curative in most of these patients.