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The occipital lymph nodes, one to three in number, are located on the back of the head close to the margin of the trapezius and resting on the insertion of the semispinalis capitis. Their afferent vessels drain the occipital region of the scalp , while their efferents pass to the superior deep cervical glands .
In children, a short axis of 8 mm can be used. [37] However, inguinal lymph nodes of up to 15 mm and cervical lymph nodes of up to 20 mm are generally normal in children up to age 8–12. [38] Lymphadenopathy of more than 1.5–2 cm increases the risk of cancer or granulomatous disease as the cause rather than only inflammation or infection ...
The facial rash usually clears as it spreads to other parts of the body. Other symptoms include low-grade fever, swollen glands (sub-occipital and posterior cervical lymphadenopathy), joint pains, headache, and conjunctivitis. [11] The swollen glands or lymph nodes can persist for up to a week and the fever rarely rises above 38 °C (100.4 °F ...
The jugulodigastric lymph nodes are found in the proximity of where the posterior belly of the digastric muscle crosses the internal jugular vein.Nodes are typically around 15 mm in length in adults, and decrease in size during old age. [1]
Submandibular lymph nodes; Submental lymph nodes; Superficial anterior cervical lymph nodes; Superficial cervical lymph nodes; Superficial lateral cervical lymph nodes; Superficial parotid lymph nodes; Superior deep cervical lymph nodes; Supraclavicular lymph nodes
Children often have generalized lymphadenopathy of the head and neck, or even PGL, without the finding of a sinister cause. At puberty this usually disappears. The immune system of some people may be sensitized by exposure to a living exogenous irritant such as a bacterial or viral infection , which then results in PGL after the organism has ...
Lymph nodes at Surface: 1. Occipital (retroauricular) 2. Mastoid 3. Superficial Parotid 4. Deep Parotid 5. Preauricular 6. Infraauricular 7. Intraglandular parotid Facial Lymph Nodes: 8. Buccinator 9. Nasolabial 10. Mandibular 11. Anterior Cervical (Superficial jugular) 12. Superficial Cervical (External jugular)
Rubella: viral TORCH infection associated with post-auricular and occipital lymphadenopathy in addition to a maculopapular rash that starts on the face and spreads to the trunk. Herpes virus: viral TORCH infection associated with painful vesicular lesions and meningitis. Syphilis: bacterial TORCH infection due to Treponema pallidum.