Drug fever: Difference between revisions

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== Etiology ==
 
== Etiology ==
* Antimicrobials are the most common overall class[[CiteRef::mackowiak1987dr]][[CiteRef::patel2010dr]]
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* Long list of offending medication, mostly based on collections of case reports[[CiteRef::mackowiak1987dr]][[CiteRef::patel2010dr]]
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* Antimicrobials are the most common overall class
 
** Penicillins are most common, including [[penicillin]], [[piperacillin]], [[ticarcillin]] [[ampicillin]], [[methicillin]], [[carbenicillin]], [[mezlocillin]], [[staphcillin]], [[nafcillin], [[oxacillin]], and [[cloxacillin]]
 
** Penicillins are most common, including [[penicillin]], [[piperacillin]], [[ticarcillin]] [[ampicillin]], [[methicillin]], [[carbenicillin]], [[mezlocillin]], [[staphcillin]], [[nafcillin], [[oxacillin]], and [[cloxacillin]]
 
** Cephalosporins, including [[cefazolin]], [[cefotaxime]], [[ceftazidime]], [[cephalexin]], and [[cephalothin]]
 
** Cephalosporins, including [[cefazolin]], [[cefotaxime]], [[ceftazidime]], [[cephalexin]], and [[cephalothin]]

Revision as of 22:05, 15 November 2019

  • A drug reaction of unclear mechanism that causes isolated fever

Pathophysiology

  • Stipulated to involve any of five mechanisms:

Etiology

Clinical Presentation

  • Fever without focus and no other likely causes
  • Can occur at any point in administration of the medication, but most often 7 to 10 days after starting
  • Fever pattern was mostly unpredictable, but could be intermittent or remittent (high but fluctuating); rarely continuous
  • Fever most commonly high, but could be low-grade
  • Usually appear well, even when febrile, including a relative bradycardia
  • Many have rigors, and may occasionally have other systemic signs or symptoms
  • Occasional leukocytosis or eosinophilia

Further Reading

References

  1. ^  Philip A. Mackowiak. Drug Fever: A Critical Appraisal of Conventional Concepts. Annals of Internal Medicine. 1987;106(5):728. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-106-5-728.
  2. ^  Ruchi A Patel, Jason C Gallagher. Drug Fever. Pharmacotherapy. 2010;30(1):57-69. doi:10.1592/phco.30.1.57.