Fever of unknown origin history and symptoms: Difference between revisions

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{{SK}} febris continua e causa ignota; febris e causa ignota; febris E.C.I.; FUO; PUO; pyrexia of unknown origin
{{SK}} febris continua e causa ignota; febris e causa ignota; febris E.C.I.; FUO; PUO; pyrexia of unknown origin


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==Pattern of Fever==
The pattern of fever generally offers little diagnostic value in ascertaining the etiology of fever. Previously described fever patterns include:<ref>{{cite book | last = Isaac | first = Benedict | title = Unexplained fever : a guide to the diagnosis and management of febrile states in medicine, surgery, pediatrics, and subspecialties | publisher = CRC Press | location = Boca Raton | year = 1991 | isbn = 9780849345562 }}</ref>
* Sustained fever (suggestive of [[brucellosis]], [[drug fever]], [[lobar pneumonia]], [[tularemia]], [[typhoid]], [[typhus]])
* Remittent fever (suggestive of [[tuberculosis]], [[mycoplasma pneumonia]], [[malaria]], [[legionellosis]])
* Intermittent fever (suggestive of [[malaria]], [[Visceral leishmaniasis|kala-azar]], [[pyaemia]])
:* Double quotidian fever (suggestive of [[Still's disease]], [[legionellosis]], [[miliary tuberculosis]], [[kala-azar]])
:* Quotidian fever (suggestive of ''[[Plasmodium falciparum]]'' or ''[[Plasmodium knowlesi]]'' [[malaria]])
:* Tertian fever (suggestive of ''[[Plasmodium vivax]]'' or ''[[Plasmodium ovale]]'' [[malaria]])
:* Quartan fever (suggestive of ''[[Plasmodium malariae]]'' [[malaria]])
:* Alternate-day fever (suggestive of response to [[antipyretic]] [[dosage|dosage schedule]])
* Hyperpyrexia (suggestive of [[intracranial hemorrhage]], [[septicemia]], [[Kawasaki disease]], [[thyroid storm]], [[drug fever]])
* Hectic or spiking pattern (suggestive of [[biliary tract|biliary]] or [[urinary tract infection]], [[endocarditis]])
* Irregular pattern (suggestive of [[fever|factitious fever]])
* Pel-Ebstein pattern (suggestive of [[Hodgkin's lymphoma]])
* Picket fence pattern (suggestive of [[mastoiditis|acute mastoiditis]] complicated by [[transverse sinus]] [[thrombosis]])
* Saddleback pattern (suggestive of [[dengue fever]], [[leptospirosis]], [[poliomyelitis]], [[human granulocytic ehrlichiosis]])
* Wunderlich curve pattern (suggestive of [[typhoid fever]])


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 20:48, 19 March 2015

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]

Synonyms and keywords: febris continua e causa ignota; febris e causa ignota; febris E.C.I.; FUO; PUO; pyrexia of unknown origin

Pattern of Fever

The pattern of fever generally offers little diagnostic value in ascertaining the etiology of fever. Previously described fever patterns include:[1]

References

  1. Isaac, Benedict (1991). Unexplained fever : a guide to the diagnosis and management of febrile states in medicine, surgery, pediatrics, and subspecialties. Boca Raton: CRC Press. ISBN 9780849345562.