Fever without a Focus Flashcards
How do antipyretics work?
- The anterior hypothalamus is what maintains a normal body temperature
- pyrogens such as: IL-1, IL-6, , TNF and interferons cause the release of arachidonic acid which is metabolized to prostaglandin E2, raising temp
- Antipyretics inhibit hypothalamic cyclooxygenase and thus decrease prostaglandin E2
What is the most common cause of fever in children?
- Viral infection
What would be considered a fever?
- RECTAL temperature of 38 degrees Celsius or higher
What is the normal temperature range?
36.6 C to 37.9 C
Body temperature normally fluctuates. When is it at its highest? lowest?
Highest: Early evening
Lowest: Morning
What 3 mechanisms can produce a fever?
1) Pyrogens
2) Heat production exceeding loss
- salicylate toxicity
- malignant hyperthermia
3) Defective heat loss
- Severe heat exposure
- Ectodermal dysplasia
Which commonly used antibiotic can cause fever?
- Vancomycin
What are the 4 main categories of fever causes?
1) Infectious
2) Inflammatory
3) Neoplastic
4) Misc
A temperature above what level is considered to be potentially lethal?
- 42 degrees Celsius in a neurologically intact child
What is a tertian fever? What causes it?
- A fever that occurs in cycles on the first and 3rd day and then repeats
- Quartan fever same but 1st and 4th day
- Caused by malaria
True or false: Fevers with temperatures under 39 degrees Celsius in healthy children generally do not require treatment
True
- Fever helps reduce infectious load
- Not harmful until higher temperature
- Treatment would be for patient comfort only, does not change course of disease
How would you dose acetaminophen in a child?
- 10-15mg/kg/dose
- every 4 hours
How would you dose ibuprofen in a child?
5-10mg/kg/dose
- every 8 hours
What features would suggest a child under 3 months of age with a fever of unknown focus is at low risk of serious infection or sepsis?
- Age older than 1 month
- Well appearing, no focus
- No hx of prematurity
- No hx of prior antimicrobial therapy
- WBC count between 5000-15000
- Urine WBC < 10 per HPF
How do you manage a low risk fever with unknown focus in a patient under 3 months?
1) Follow as outpatient
- within 24 hours or sooner if change
- No antibiotics are needed or can give single IM dose of ceftriaxone