Fever Flashcards
If your temperature is over 37, you have a fever. True or false.
False. Your temperature needs to be over 38.
What is the normal temperature range?
36.5 - 37.5
Why does a spinal cord injury above T6 affect the body temperature regulation?
Because the hypothalamus can no longer control the skin blood flow or sweating.
Explain body temperature regulation.
- regulated by thermoregulatory centre in the hypothalamus
- generated in tissues, transferred to skin by the blood and released to the environment
What maintains the body temperature?
Thermostatic set point.
Name two mechanisms of heat loss.
- radiation
- conduction
- convection
- evaporation
Fever is also known as ________.
Pyrexia
What is rogor?
Shivering episode. It is common in fever.
What is fever?
Elevation of body temperature caused by cytokine induced upward displacement of the set point of the hypothalamus. The fever is broken when the factor causing the increase is removed.
A hypothalamus fever rarely goes higher than 45 degrees. True or false.
False. It rarely goes higher than 41 degrees. If it is higher than 41 degrees then it is mainly due to superimposed activity.
What happens if your temperature is above 41 degrees?
- convulsions
- hyperthermic states
- direct impairment of temperature control centre.
What causes neurogenic fever?
- damage to hypothalamus
- intracranial bleeding
- raised intracranial pressure
How does small increases in temperature enhance our immune function?
- increased activity and mobility of WBC
- stimulation of interferon production
- activation of T cells
Explain two of the four fever patterns.
Intermittent - temperature returns to normal at least once in 24 hours
Remittent - does not return to normal, varies by a few degrees in either direction
Sustained - temperature remains above normal with little variation
Relapsing - one or more episodes of fever, each as long as several days, with one or more days of normal temperature between episodes.
Name and explain the four stages of fever.
Prodrome
- mild headache, fatigue, general malaise, aches and pain
Chill
- feeling chilled, generalised shaking, vasoconstriction, pilo-erection, pallor
Flush
- vasodilation, skin warm and flushed
Sweating