Sore Throat? Before You Reach for Paracetamol, Read This.

They both cause a painful sore throat. They both make swallowing feel like a punishment. And if you search the symptoms online, they look almost identical.

But tonsillitis and strep throat are not the same condition — and the treatment for each is different. Getting the wrong treatment doesn’t just fail to help. In the case of strep throat, it can lead to complications that are entirely avoidable with early, accurate diagnosis.

Here’s how an ENT specialist at American Hospital Clinics Doha tells the two apart — and what happens next.

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At American Hospital Clinics Doha

What Is Tonsillitis?

Tonsillitis is inflammation of the tonsils — the two oval-shaped tissue pads at the back of your throat. It can be caused by viruses (the most common cause) or bacteria. The tonsils are part of your immune system, and inflammation occurs when they’re fighting off an infection.

Symptoms of Tonsillitis:

        Sore throat — often severe

        Red, swollen tonsils — sometimes with white or yellow patches

        Difficulty and pain when swallowing

        Swollen lymph nodes in the neck

        Fever

        Bad breath

        Muffled or ‘hot potato’ voice in severe cases

What Is Strep Throat?

Strep throat is a bacterial infection specifically caused by Group A Streptococcus (GAS). It is a type of tonsillitis — but not all tonsillitis is strep throat. Only about 20 to 30% of sore throats in children and 5 to 15% in adults are caused by strep.

The critical difference: strep throat requires antibiotics. Viral tonsillitis does not.

Features More Suggestive of Strep Throat:

        Sudden onset of severe sore throat

        High fever (38.5°C or above)

        Visible white or yellow exudate (pus) on the tonsils

        Swollen, tender lymph nodes in the neck

        Absence of cough — strep rarely causes cough

        Absence of runny nose — suggests bacterial rather than viral cause

ENT specialist in Doha

Key Point: The presence of a cough and runny nose strongly suggests a viral cause — not strep. An ENT specialist uses both clinical assessment and throat swab testing to make an accurate diagnosis.

 

How an ENT Doctor in Doha Diagnoses Tonsillitis vs. Strep Throat

Rapid Strep Test (Throat Swab)

A quick swab of the back of the throat is tested for Group A Streptococcus. Results are available within minutes. A positive result confirms strep; a negative result strongly suggests a viral cause.

Throat Culture

If the rapid test is negative but clinical suspicion remains high, a throat culture is sent to the lab. Results take 24 to 48 hours but are more sensitive than the rapid test.

Treatment: What Happens After Diagnosis?

Diagnosis

Treatment

Duration

Viral Tonsillitis

Supportive: rest, fluids, pain relief, salt-water gargling

7 to 10 days — resolves without antibiotics

Strep Throat (bacterial)

Antibiotics (penicillin or amoxicillin is first line)

10-day course — must be completed

Recurrent Tonsillitis

ENT assessment for tonsillectomy consideration

Ongoing management

Peritonsillar Abscess

Drainage procedure + IV antibiotics

Urgent — same-day treatment needed

Important: Never stop antibiotics early even if you feel better. Incomplete courses of strep treatment increase the risk of complications including rheumatic fever — a preventable but serious condition.

When Does Tonsillitis Become a Reason for Surgery?

Tonsillectomy (tonsil removal) is recommended by ENT guidelines when:

        Tonsillitis occurs 7 or more times in 1 year

        Tonsillitis occurs 5 or more times per year for 2 consecutive years

        Tonsillitis occurs 3 or more times per year for 3 consecutive years

        Tonsillitis is causing significant absences from school or work

        A peritonsillar abscess has occurred

        Enlarged tonsils are causing significant breathing obstruction or sleep-disordered breathing

 At American Hospital Clinics Doha, tonsillectomy decisions are made with clear evidence-based criteria and full discussion of alternatives. The procedure is one of the most commonly performed ENT surgeries globally, with a high success and safety profile.

REVIEWED & ENDORSED BY

ENT Department │ American Hospital Clinics Doha

"The distinction between viral tonsillitis and strep throat genuinely matters — one needs antibiotics, one doesn't. Overprescribing antibiotics contributes to resistance; under prescribing strep risks serious complications. Accurate diagnosis with a throat swab is the only reliable way to make that call. At American Hospital Clinics Doha, we always test before we treat."

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between tonsillitis and strep throat?
Tonsillitis is inflammation of the tonsils — it can be viral or bacterial. Strep throat is a specific bacterial infection (Group A Streptococcus) that causes tonsillitis. Strep requires antibiotics; most other tonsillitis does not.
How does a doctor test for strep throat in Doha?
A rapid strep test (throat swab) is performed in the clinic. Results are available within minutes. A throat culture may be sent to the lab for a more sensitive result if needed.
Do I need antibiotics for a sore throat?
Only if the sore throat is caused by a bacterial infection like strep. Viral sore throats — the majority — do not improve with antibiotics. An ENT doctor can test and advise appropriately.
How many times do you need tonsillitis before considering tonsillectomy?
ENT guidelines generally recommend tonsillectomy after 7 or more episodes in one year, or 5+ per year for two years, or 3+ per year for three years. Your ENT specialist will advise based on your specific history.
What are the complications of untreated strep throat?
Untreated strep can lead to rheumatic fever (affecting the heart), post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis (affecting the kidneys), and peritonsillar abscess. These complications are entirely preventable with timely antibiotic treatment.
Can adults get tonsillitis?
Yes. Tonsillitis affects all age groups, though it is more common in children. Adults can also be candidates for tonsillectomy when the frequency and severity of episodes meets the clinical criteria.

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C Ring Road, Al Muntazah St, Near Al Andalus Petrol Station, Doha, Qatar