Today, fever is diagnosed by looking at temperatures above 38o C (100.40 F). The same temperature is used to determine hyperthermia. A fever is not a high body temperature. High body temperature is hyperthermia. Don't call them fever. Patients with fever and low-temperature hypothermia are more likely to be assessed as hyperthermia when they lie unconscious in the sun and are re-warmed externally. The unconscious patient lying in the sun is brought to the nearest hospital. If only temperature is checked, hypothermia or fever cannot be identified. Heat is not a fever-causing substance. Heat is a fever reducer by increasing blood flow. It is fundamentally wrong to determine fever by looking at the presence of fever-reducing substances in t...
Fever is a physiological response to infectionwhich seems to have evolved and beenpreserved in human...
THERE are few problems confronting the internist more challenging, vex-ing and yet intriguing than-f...
[10–12] warrants using the current outpatient reference standard, rectal ther-mometry, when measurin...
fever patient has disease and fever at the same time. From this, there is no system of separate the ...
Elevated body temperature is a common finding in patients presenting to the emergency department. Di...
Fever is defined as a body temperature, which exceeds that found in the 99th percentile of healthy i...
Fever is a common physiological response characterized by an elevation in body temperature, often in...
Hyperthermia is an internal body temperature increase above 40.5 °C; normally internal body temperat...
Fever is a common presenting complaint in sub-Saharan Africa. Although it has many causes, the sympt...
Hyperthermia is an internal body temperature increase above 40.5 degrees C; normally internal body t...
Fever is a common symptom in the Intensive Care Unit. At least half of febrile episodes are caused...
Body-temperature elevations are multifactorial in origin and classified as hyperthermia as a rise in...
Fever is a remarkably sensitive indicator of infectious disease. The thermometer in clini-cal use to...
Fever, commonly defined by a temperature of ≥38.3°C (101°F), occurs in approximately one half of pat...
<p>Fever is a condition when body temperature 38°C and more. There are also restrictions that took m...
Fever is a physiological response to infectionwhich seems to have evolved and beenpreserved in human...
THERE are few problems confronting the internist more challenging, vex-ing and yet intriguing than-f...
[10–12] warrants using the current outpatient reference standard, rectal ther-mometry, when measurin...
fever patient has disease and fever at the same time. From this, there is no system of separate the ...
Elevated body temperature is a common finding in patients presenting to the emergency department. Di...
Fever is defined as a body temperature, which exceeds that found in the 99th percentile of healthy i...
Fever is a common physiological response characterized by an elevation in body temperature, often in...
Hyperthermia is an internal body temperature increase above 40.5 °C; normally internal body temperat...
Fever is a common presenting complaint in sub-Saharan Africa. Although it has many causes, the sympt...
Hyperthermia is an internal body temperature increase above 40.5 degrees C; normally internal body t...
Fever is a common symptom in the Intensive Care Unit. At least half of febrile episodes are caused...
Body-temperature elevations are multifactorial in origin and classified as hyperthermia as a rise in...
Fever is a remarkably sensitive indicator of infectious disease. The thermometer in clini-cal use to...
Fever, commonly defined by a temperature of ≥38.3°C (101°F), occurs in approximately one half of pat...
<p>Fever is a condition when body temperature 38°C and more. There are also restrictions that took m...
Fever is a physiological response to infectionwhich seems to have evolved and beenpreserved in human...
THERE are few problems confronting the internist more challenging, vex-ing and yet intriguing than-f...
[10–12] warrants using the current outpatient reference standard, rectal ther-mometry, when measurin...