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Fever Of Unknown Origin




Mandell's Principles and Practices of Infection Diseases 6th Edition (2004) by Gerald L. Mandell MD, MACP, John E. Bennett MD, Raphael Dolin MD, ISBN 0443066434 · Hardback · 4016 Pages Churchill Livingstone
Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine 16th Edtion, The McGraw-Hill Companies, ISBN 0-07-140235-7
The Oxford Textbook of Medicine Edited by David A. Warrell, Timothy M. Cox and John D. Firth with Edward J. Benz, Fourth Edition (2003), Oxford University Press , ISBN 0192629220

Cecil Textbook of Medicine by Lee Goldman, Dennis Ausiello, 22nd Edtion (2003), W.B. Saunders Company, ISBN 072169652X
Irwin and Rippe's Intensive Care Medicine by Irwin and Rippe, Fifth Edition (2003), Lippincott Williams & Wilkins , ISBN 0-7817-3548-3

If the cause is found it usually is a Diagnosis Per Exclusionem . Meaning that by eliminating all possibilities the explanation that remains must be the correct one.


DEFINITION

In 1961 Petersdorf and Beeson suggested the following criteria:
  • Fever higher than 38.3°C (101°F) on several occasions

  • Persisting without diagnosis for at least 3 weeks

  • At least 1 week's investigation in hospital


Presently FUO cases are codified in four subclasses.


Classic FUO

This refers to the original classification by Petersdorf and Beeson. The outpatient setting has been included to reflect current medical practise. The current definition requires three outpatient visits or three days in hospital or 1 week of "intelligent and invasive" ambulatory investigation. Studies show there are five categories of conditions: Infection s (i.e. abscesses, Endocarditis , Tuberculosis , and complicated Urinary Tract Infection s), Neoplasm s (i.e. Lymphoma s, Leukaemia s), Connective Tissue Disease s (i.e. Temporal Arteritis and Polymyalgia Rheumatica , Still's Disease , Systemic Lupus Erythematosus , and Rheumatoid Arthritis ), miscellaneous disorders (i.e. Alcoholic Hepatitis , Granuloma tous conditions), and undiagnosed conditions.

The new definition is broader, stipulating three outpatient visits or 3 days in the hospital without elucidation of a cause or 1 week of "intelligent and invasive" ambulatory investigation.


Nosocomial FUO

Nosocomial FUO refers to Pyrexia in patients that have been admitted to hospital for at least 24 hours. This is commonly related to hospital associated factors such as, surgery, use of Urinary Catheter , intravascular devices (i.e. "drip", Pulmonary Artery Catheter ), drugs (antibiotics induced Clostridium Difficile colitis, and Drug Fever ), immobilisation (decubitus, thromboembolic event). Sinusitis in the Intensive Care Unit is associated with nasogastric and orotracheal tubes. Other conditions that should be considered are deep-vein thrombophlebitis, and Pulmonary Embolism , Transfusion Reaction s, acalculous cholecystitis, Thyroiditis , alcohol/drug withdrawal, Adrenal Insufficiency , Pancreatitis .


Immune-deficient FUO

Immunodeficiency can be seen in patients receiving chemotherapy or hematologic malignant neoplasms. Fever is concommittent with Neutropenia ( Neutrophil <500/uL) (lack of white blood cells) or impaired cell-mediated immunity. The lack of immune response masks a potentially dangerous course. Infection is the most common cause.


Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-associated FUO


HIV-infected patients are a subgroup of the immunodeficient FUO, and frequently have fever. The primary phase knows fever since it has a Mononucleosis -like illness. In advanced stages of infection fever mostly is the result of a superimposed illness.


SOME IMPORTANT CAUSES

Extrapulmonary tuberculosis is the most frequent cause of FUO.
Drug fever, as sole symptom of an adverse reaction to medication, should always be thought of. Disseminated granulomatoses such as Tuberculosis , Histoplasmosis , Coccidioidomycosis , Blastomycosis and Sarcoidosis are associated with FUO. Lymphomas are the most common cause of FUO in adults. Thromboembolic disease (i.e. pulmonary embolism, deep venous thrombosis) occasionally shows fever. Although infrequent, its potentially lethal consequences warrant evaluation of this cause. Endocarditis, although uncommon, is another important thing to consider. An underestimated reason is factitious fever. Patients frequently are women that work, or have worked, in the medical field and have complex Medical Histories .


DIAGNOSIS

A comprehensive and meticulous history (i.e. illness of family members, recent visit to the tropics, medication), repeated physical examination (i.e. skin rash, eschar, lymphadenopathy, heart murmur) and a myriad of laboratory tests (serological, blood culture, immunological) are the cornerstone of finding the cause.

Other investigastions may be needed. Ultrasound may show cholelithiasis, echocardiagraphy may be needed in suspected endocarditis and a CT-scan may show infection or malignanct of internal organs. Another technique is Ga-scanning which seems to visualize chronic infections more effectively. Invasive techniques (biopsy and laparotomy for pathological and bacteriological examination) may be required before a definite diagnosis is possible.

Despite all this, diagnosis may only be suggested by the therapy chosen. When a patient recovers after discontinuing medication it likely was Drug Fever , when antibiotics or antimycotics work it probably was infection. Emperical therapeutic trials should be used in those patients in which other techniques have failed.


THERAPY

Unless the patient is acutely ill, no therapy should be started before the cause has been found. This is because non-specific therapy rarely is effective and mostly delays diagnosis. An exception is made for neutropenic patients in which delay could lead to serious complications. After blood cultures are taken this condition is aggressively treated with broad-spectrum antibiotics. Antibiotics are adjusted according to the results of the cultures taken.

HIV-infected persons with pyrexia and Hypoxia , will be started on medication for possible Pneumocystis Carinii infection. Therapy is adjusted after a diagnosis is made.


PROGNOSIS

Since there is a wide range of conditions associated with FUO, prognosis depends on the particular cause. If after 6 to 12 months no diagnosis is found, the chances diminish of ever finding a specific cause. However, under those circumstances prognosis is good.


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