Elevated body temperature is a common finding in patients presenting to the emergency department. Differentiating fever from hyperthermia is an important first step in these patients, as the differentials and required diagnostics and therapeutics will be quite different between the two problems. Fever is an important adaptive response that is present throughout all of the animal kingdom. While it is sentinel of an underlying inflammatory disease, it is generally not harmful and does not require specific treatment in and of itself. Rather, its presence, along with findings from the rest of the physical examination, can help in developing a list of differentials and a diagnostic and therapeutic plan
Fever is a common presenting complaint in sub-Saharan Africa. Although it has many causes, the sympt...
Changes in body temperature are a characteristic feature of sepsis. The study by Kushimoto and colle...
Fever is an adaptive response to a variety of infectious, inflammatory, and foreign stimuli. The “fe...
Fever is a common physiological response characterized by an elevation in body temperature, often in...
Today, fever is diagnosed by looking at temperatures above 38o C (100.40 F). The same temperature is...
fever patient has disease and fever at the same time. From this, there is no system of separate the ...
Hyperthermia is an internal body temperature increase above 40.5 °C; normally internal body temperat...
Hyperthermia is an internal body temperature increase above 40.5 degrees C; normally internal body t...
Body-temperature elevations are multifactorial in origin and classified as hyperthermia as a rise in...
Fever is defined as a body temperature, which exceeds that found in the 99th percentile of healthy i...
Fever, commonly defined by a temperature of ≥38.3°C (101°F), occurs in approximately one half of pat...
Measurement of body temperature remains one of the most common ways to assess health. An increase in...
Fever is a physiological response to infectionwhich seems to have evolved and beenpreserved in human...
Fever, although part of the second line of defense in immune response, is still a topic of discussio...
The basics of fever pathogenesis are described. Fever is characterized in terms of its duration, sev...
Fever is a common presenting complaint in sub-Saharan Africa. Although it has many causes, the sympt...
Changes in body temperature are a characteristic feature of sepsis. The study by Kushimoto and colle...
Fever is an adaptive response to a variety of infectious, inflammatory, and foreign stimuli. The “fe...
Fever is a common physiological response characterized by an elevation in body temperature, often in...
Today, fever is diagnosed by looking at temperatures above 38o C (100.40 F). The same temperature is...
fever patient has disease and fever at the same time. From this, there is no system of separate the ...
Hyperthermia is an internal body temperature increase above 40.5 °C; normally internal body temperat...
Hyperthermia is an internal body temperature increase above 40.5 degrees C; normally internal body t...
Body-temperature elevations are multifactorial in origin and classified as hyperthermia as a rise in...
Fever is defined as a body temperature, which exceeds that found in the 99th percentile of healthy i...
Fever, commonly defined by a temperature of ≥38.3°C (101°F), occurs in approximately one half of pat...
Measurement of body temperature remains one of the most common ways to assess health. An increase in...
Fever is a physiological response to infectionwhich seems to have evolved and beenpreserved in human...
Fever, although part of the second line of defense in immune response, is still a topic of discussio...
The basics of fever pathogenesis are described. Fever is characterized in terms of its duration, sev...
Fever is a common presenting complaint in sub-Saharan Africa. Although it has many causes, the sympt...
Changes in body temperature are a characteristic feature of sepsis. The study by Kushimoto and colle...
Fever is an adaptive response to a variety of infectious, inflammatory, and foreign stimuli. The “fe...