Fever, commonly defined by a temperature of ≥38.3°C (101°F), occurs in approximately one half of patients admitted to intensive care units. Fever may be attributed to both infectious and noninfectious causes, and its development in critically ill adult medical patients is associated with an increased risk for death. Although it is widespread and clinically accepted practice to therapeutically lower temperature in patients with hyperthermic syndromes, patients with marked hyperpyrexia, and selected populations such as those with neurologic impairment, it is controversial whether most medical patients with moderate degrees of fever should be treated with antipyretic or direct cooling therapies. Although treatment of fever may improve patient ...
Fever is common in patients with acute brain injury and worsens secondary brain injury and clinical ...
Fever is a physiological response to infectionwhich seems to have evolved and beenpreserved in human...
Abstract OBJECTIVE To evaluate the effects of physical methods of reducing body temperature (ice pa...
Fever, commonly defined by a temperature of ≥38.3°C (101°F), occurs in approximately one half of pat...
Fever is common among patients admitted to intensive care units (ICUs). In spite of the frequency of...
Fever in critically ill adults: monitoring, management, and outcomes Fever is a common occurrence in...
The need for temperature modulation (mostly cooling) in critically ill patients is based on the expe...
Fever, in the presence of traumatic brain injury (TBI), is associated with worsened neurologic outco...
Introduction Although fever and hypothermia are common abnormal physical signs observed in patients ...
Changes in body temperature are a characteristic feature of sepsis. The study by Kushimoto and colle...
International audienceIn recent years, fever control in critically ill patients by medications and/o...
Fever is a common physiological response characterized by an elevation in body temperature, often in...
Fever, which is arbitrary defined as an increase in body temperature above 38.3\ub0C, can affect up ...
Introduction: Although fever and hypothermia are common abnormal physical signs observed in patients...
Fever is an adaptive response to a variety of infectious, inflammatory, and foreign stimuli. The “fe...
Fever is common in patients with acute brain injury and worsens secondary brain injury and clinical ...
Fever is a physiological response to infectionwhich seems to have evolved and beenpreserved in human...
Abstract OBJECTIVE To evaluate the effects of physical methods of reducing body temperature (ice pa...
Fever, commonly defined by a temperature of ≥38.3°C (101°F), occurs in approximately one half of pat...
Fever is common among patients admitted to intensive care units (ICUs). In spite of the frequency of...
Fever in critically ill adults: monitoring, management, and outcomes Fever is a common occurrence in...
The need for temperature modulation (mostly cooling) in critically ill patients is based on the expe...
Fever, in the presence of traumatic brain injury (TBI), is associated with worsened neurologic outco...
Introduction Although fever and hypothermia are common abnormal physical signs observed in patients ...
Changes in body temperature are a characteristic feature of sepsis. The study by Kushimoto and colle...
International audienceIn recent years, fever control in critically ill patients by medications and/o...
Fever is a common physiological response characterized by an elevation in body temperature, often in...
Fever, which is arbitrary defined as an increase in body temperature above 38.3\ub0C, can affect up ...
Introduction: Although fever and hypothermia are common abnormal physical signs observed in patients...
Fever is an adaptive response to a variety of infectious, inflammatory, and foreign stimuli. The “fe...
Fever is common in patients with acute brain injury and worsens secondary brain injury and clinical ...
Fever is a physiological response to infectionwhich seems to have evolved and beenpreserved in human...
Abstract OBJECTIVE To evaluate the effects of physical methods of reducing body temperature (ice pa...