Fever of unknown origin: Difference between revisions
From IDWiki
(Created page with "==Background== * Typically defined as a persistent fever that remains undiagnosed despite an extensive initial workup * Causes have changed over the decades as diagnostic tool...") Â |
m (→â€)  |
||
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
==Background== |
==Background== |
||
* |
*Typically defined as a persistent fever that remains undiagnosed despite an extensive initial workup |
||
* |
*Causes have changed over the decades as diagnostic tools have improved |
||
===Definitions=== |
===Definitions=== |
||
{| class="wikitable" |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
! |
!Type |
||
! |
!Definition |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|Classic |
||
| |
|Temperatures >38.3ºC without diagnosis despite 3 weeks of outpatient investigations over 3 visits, or 1 week of intensive outpatient investigation, or 3 days of inpatient investigation |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|Nosocomial |
||
| |
|Temperatures >38.3ºC without diagnosis in a hospitalized acute-care patient, where infection was not community-acquired, despite 3 days of investigations including preliminary results of blood cultures at 48 hours |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|Neutropenic |
||
| |
|Temperatures >38.3ºC without diagnosis in patients with neutrophils <500/μL or expected to fall to that level in 1-2 days, despite initial investigations including preliminary results of blood cultures at 48 hours |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|[[HIV]]-associated |
||
| |
|Temperatures >38.3ºC without diagnosis over 4 weeks (outpatient) or 3 days (inpatient) in patients with HIV, despite initial investigations including preliminary results of blood cultures at 48 hours |
||
|} |
|} |
||
==Differential Diagnosis== |
==Differential Diagnosis== |
||
* |
*'''Infectious''' (16 to 52%) |
||
** |
**More common: [[tuberculosis]] (especially extrapulmonary disease), [[culture-negative endocarditis]], [[Epstein-Barr virus]], [[cytomegalovirus]] |
||
** |
**More common, in recent travelers: [[malaria]] and [[dengue]] |
||
** |
**Less common: [[bartonellosis]], [[brucellosis]], occult [[abscess]], [[salmonellosis]], [[urinary tract infection]], [[acute HIV]], [[hepatitis A]], [[hepatitis B]], [[hepatitis E]], [[roseolavirus]], [[HHV-7]], [[osteomyelitis]], [[septic arthritis]] |
||
** |
**Less common, in recent travelers: [[rickettsioses]], [[leptospirosis]], [[schistosomiasis]], [[gnathostomiasis]], [[cysticercosis]], [[enteric fever]] |
||
* |
*'''Neoplastic''' (7 to 35%) |
||
** More common: lymphoma, leukemia, solid-organ tumours (especially renal cell carcinoma and melanoma) |
|||
** |
**More common: [[lymphoma]], [[leukemia]], [[solid organ tumour]] (especially [[renal cell carcinoma]] and [[melanoma]]) |
||
**Less common: [[myelodysplastic syndrome]], [[colonic adenocarcinoma]], [[multiple myeloma]], [[gastric carcinoma]], [[mesothelioma]], [[Castleman disease]] |
|||
* |
*'''Inflammatory''' (11 to 34%) |
||
** More common: [[adult-onset Still disease]], [[systemic lupus erythematosus]], [[polymyalgia rheumatica]], [[temporal arteritis]], [[inflammatory bowel disease]] |
|||
** |
**More common: [[adult-onset Still disease]], [[systemic lupus erythematosus]], [[polymyalgia rheumatica]], [[temporal arteritis]], [[inflammatory bowel disease]] |
||
**Less common: [[rheumatoid arthritis]], [[polyarteritis nodosa]], [[sarcoidosis]], [[granulomatosis with polyangiitis]], [[Kawasaki syndrome]] |
|||
* |
*'''Other''' (2 to 20%) |
||
** |
**More common: [[drug fever]], [[chronic pulmonary embolism]], [[hyperthyroidism]], [[hematoma]] |
||
** |
**Less common: [[subacute thyroiditis]], [[hypoadrenalism]], [[necrotizing lymphadenitis]], [[periodic fever syndromes]], [[hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis]], [[factitious fever]] |
||
* |
*'''Undiagnosed''' (7 to 32%) |
||
== Investigations == |
|||
* ESR or CRP, LDH, CK, ANA, RF, SPEP |
|||
* Blood cultures x3 |
|||
* HIV serology |
|||
* Heterophile antibody test (in children or young adults) |
|||
* TST or IGRA |
|||
* CT of the abdomen and chest |
|||
==Further Reading== |
==Further Reading== |
||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
[[Category::Fever syndromes]] |
[[Category::Fever syndromes]] |
Latest revision as of 01:21, 21 July 2022
Background
- Typically defined as a persistent fever that remains undiagnosed despite an extensive initial workup
- Causes have changed over the decades as diagnostic tools have improved
Definitions
Type | Definition |
---|---|
Classic | Temperatures >38.3ºC without diagnosis despite 3 weeks of outpatient investigations over 3 visits, or 1 week of intensive outpatient investigation, or 3 days of inpatient investigation |
Nosocomial | Temperatures >38.3ºC without diagnosis in a hospitalized acute-care patient, where infection was not community-acquired, despite 3 days of investigations including preliminary results of blood cultures at 48 hours |
Neutropenic | Temperatures >38.3ºC without diagnosis in patients with neutrophils <500/μL or expected to fall to that level in 1-2 days, despite initial investigations including preliminary results of blood cultures at 48 hours |
HIV-associated | Temperatures >38.3ºC without diagnosis over 4 weeks (outpatient) or 3 days (inpatient) in patients with HIV, despite initial investigations including preliminary results of blood cultures at 48 hours |
Differential Diagnosis
- Infectious (16 to 52%)
- More common: tuberculosis (especially extrapulmonary disease), culture-negative endocarditis, Epstein-Barr virus, cytomegalovirus
- More common, in recent travelers: malaria and dengue
- Less common: bartonellosis, brucellosis, occult abscess, salmonellosis, urinary tract infection, acute HIV, hepatitis A, hepatitis B, hepatitis E, roseolavirus, HHV-7, osteomyelitis, septic arthritis
- Less common, in recent travelers: rickettsioses, leptospirosis, schistosomiasis, gnathostomiasis, cysticercosis, enteric fever
- Neoplastic (7 to 35%)
- More common: lymphoma, leukemia, solid organ tumour (especially renal cell carcinoma and melanoma)
- Less common: myelodysplastic syndrome, colonic adenocarcinoma, multiple myeloma, gastric carcinoma, mesothelioma, Castleman disease
- Inflammatory (11 to 34%)
- Other (2 to 20%)
- Undiagnosed (7 to 32%)
Investigations
- ESR or CRP, LDH, CK, ANA, RF, SPEP
- Blood cultures x3
- HIV serology
- Heterophile antibody test (in children or young adults)
- TST or IGRA
- CT of the abdomen and chest
Further Reading
- Fever and Fever of Unknown Origin: Review, Recent Advances, and Lingering Dogma. Open Forum Infect Dis. 2020. doi: 10.1093/ofid/ofaa132