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Fever of Unknown Origin in the United States*

Fever of Unknown Origin in the United States*: Excerpt from A Pocket Manual of Differential Diagnosis

Infection


Bacterial
   Bacterial endocarditis
   Sinusitis
   Osteomyelitis
   Intravascular catheter infections
   Bronchiectasis
   Relapsing mastoiditis
   Upper abdominal sources
       Cholangitis
       Cholecystitis
       Empyema of the gallbladder
       Subphrenic, pancreatic, hepatic, and splenic abscesses
   Lower abdominal sources
       Appendicitis
       Appendiceal abscess
       Diverticulitis
       Pelvic inflammatory disease or abscess
       Perirectal abscess
       Peritonitis
       Septic pelvic thrombophlebitis
   Genitourinary sources
              Perinephric, intrarenal abscess
       Prostatic abscess
       Pyelonephritis
       Ureteral obstruction
       Renal tuberculosis
   Acute rheumatic fever
   Bacteremia without primary focus, especially
       Meningococcemia
       Gonococcemia
       Salmonellosis
       Listeriosis
       Brucellosis
       Ehrlichiosis
       Borreliosis
       Yersiniosis
       Tularemia
       Leptospirosis
Tuberculosis (TB), especially Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Mycobacterium avium complex, Mycobacterium kansasii

   Viral, especially Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) (infectious mononucleosis), hepatitis, coxsackie B, cytomegalovirus (CMV), human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), parvovirus B19, dengue
   Chlamydial, rickettsial (especially Q fever, psittacosis)
   Parasitic, protozoan, especially
       Amebiasis
       Malaria
       Trichinosis
       Toxoplasmosis
   Pneumocystis carinii

       Babesiosis
   Fungal, especially
       Histoplasmosis
       Blastomycosis
       Cryptococcosis
       Coccidiomycosis
       Sporotrichosis

Malignancy


Leukemia, lymphoma, especially Hodgkin's disease
Solid tumor, especially carcinoma of
   Kidney
   Lung
   Pancreas
   Liver
   Colon
Metastatic carcinoma
Carcinomatosis
Atrial myxoma

Collagen-Vascular Disease


Systemic lupus erythematosus
Rheumatoid arthritis
Rheumatic fever
Polyarteritis nodosa, hypersensitivity vasculitis
Wegener's granulomatosis
Temporal arteritis
Adult Still's disease
Cryoglobulinemia
Churg-Strauss vasculitis
Takayasu's arteritis

Drugs


Antibiotics, especially
   Penicillins
   Cephalosporins
   Sulfonamides
   Amphotericin B
   Quinolones
   TB therapy, especially isoniazid (INH)
Allopurinol
Phenytoin
Barbiturates
Procainamide
Quinidine
Nonsteroidal antiinflammatory therapy
Antineoplastic therapy
Interferon
H2   blockers
Methyldopa

Other


Pulmonary emboli, multiple
Thrombophlebitis
Sarcoidosis
Hepatitis (alcoholic or granulomatous)
Inflammatory bowel disease
Whipple's disease
Thyroiditis
Thyrotoxicosis
Myelofibrosis
Serum sickness
Hemolytic states
Trauma with hematoma in closed spaces (especially peri-
splenic, perihepatic, perivesicular)
Dissecting aneurysm
Periodic fever (especially familial Mediterranean fever)
Gout
Addison's disease
Adrenal insufficiency
Weber-Christian disease
Cyclic neutropenia
Cat scratch fever
Kikuchi disease
Postpericardotomy syndrome
Factitious fever
Habitual hyperthermia

References


1. Petersdorf RG, Beeson PB: Fever of Unexplained Origin: Report on 100 Cases. Medicine   (Baltimore) 40:1, 1961.
2. Petersdorf RG: Fever of Unknown Origin: an Old Friend Revisited (Editorial). Arch Intern Med   152:21, 1992.
3. See Bibliography, 1.
4. See Bibliography, 2.
5. See Bibliography, 3.
6. See Bibliography, 8.

*Defined as temperature of >38.3°C daily for 2 to 3 weeks, with cause undiagnosed despite 1 week of intensive studies in hospital.

References


1. Hoeprich, pp. 133–140, 838–840, 936–940, 956–960. See Bibliography, 1.
2. Kelley, pp. 1570–1575, 1584–1585, 1764–1767, 1812–1819, 1968–1973. See Bibliography, 2.
3. Schlossberg, pp. 261–278. See Bibliography, 3.
4. Mandell, pp. 2666–2686, 2709–2715, 2717–2732. See Bibliography, 8.

Book Source Details

  • Book Title: A Pocket Manual of Differential Diagnosis
  • Author(s): Stephen N. Adler, Dianne B. Gasbarra
  • Year of Publication: 1999
  • Copyright Details: A Pocket Manual of Differential Diagnosis, Copyright © 1999 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

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Copyright notice for book excerpts: Copyright © 2008 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. All rights reserved.




More About This Book:
Title: A Pocket Manual of Differential Diagnosis
Authors: Stephen N. Adler, Dianne B. Gasbarra
Publisher: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
Copyright: 1999
ISBN: 0-78171-943-7

 » Next page: Infection and Fever (Complications of HIV) (A Pocket Manual of Differential Diagnosis)

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