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Primary Care Liaison

Cervical lymph nodes - pre-referral

  • This is an urgent surgical condition.

    Assessment and when to refer

    History and physical examination

    • Reactive
      • Mobile, non-tender and < 1.5 cm
      • No treatment required and referral not necessary.
        • Surgeons happy to see and reassure - non-urgent referral.
        • Please provide history and any investigations undertaken.

    • Acute infective (Staph or Strep)
      • Sudden onset with tenderness and erythema.
      • Often recent URTI.ÌýÌý
      • If seen early start Augmentin and follow-up closely.
        • Refer for surgical opinion if no improvement after 48 hours or fluctuance.
        • Please provide history and any investigations undertaken.

    • Atypical TB
      • May present as a slowly evolving infective process, as a node not responding to antibiotics, or with clinical features similar to a neoplastic lymph node.Ìý
      • Antibiotics have no role.
        • Refer all casesÌýfor General Surgical review.
        • Please provide history and any investigations undertaken.

    • Neoplastic
      • Hard, immobile, persistent and > 2 cm.
        • IMMEDIATE REFERRAL to General Surgery Outpatients
        • Fax referralÌýto 03 9345 5034 and call 03 9345 6180 to note urgent referral.
        • Please provide history and any investigations undertaken.

    Resources

    References and more reading

    Thanks to Consultant Paediatric Surgeon Tom Clarnette for permission to adapt existing guidelines.ÌýMany thanksÌýto the GPs involved in the review.ÌýFirst publishedÌýDec 2007.Ìý Reviewed August 2009. Please readÌýCopyright and Disclaimer.