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Causes of Common cold
Causes of Common cold (Diseases Database):
The follow list shows some of the possible medical causes of Common cold that are listed by the Diseases Database:
- Human metapneumovirus
- Coronavirus 229E, Human
- Rhinovirus
- Respiratory syncytial virus
- Adenovirus
- Parainfluenza
- Coronavirus OC43, Human
Common cold as a symptom:
Conditions listing Common cold as a symptom may also be potential underlying causes of Common cold. Our database lists the following as having Common cold as a symptom of that condition:
- Adenoviruses
- Parainfluenza
- Parainfluenza virus type 1
- Parainfluenza virus type 2
- Parainfluenza virus type 3
- Parainfluenza virus type 4
What causes Common cold?
Causes: Common cold:
virus e.g. rhinovirus, coronavirus, adenovirus, coxsackievirus, echovirus
Article excerpts about the
causes of Common cold:
The Common Cold, NIAID Fact Sheet: NIAID (Excerpt)
Does cold weather cause a cold? Although many people are convinced that a cold results from exposure to cold weather, or from getting chilled or overheated, NIAID grantees have found that these conditions have little or no effect on the development or severity of a cold. Nor is susceptibility apparently related to factors such as exercise, diet, or enlarged tonsils or adenoids. On the other hand, research suggests that psychological stress, allergic disorders affecting the nasal passages or pharynx (throat), and menstrual cycles may have an impact on a person's susceptibility to colds. (Source: excerpt from The Common Cold, NIAID Fact Sheet: NIAID)
The Common Cold, NIAID Fact Sheet: NIAID (Excerpt)
Cold symptoms are probably the result of the body's immune response to the viral invasion. Virus-infected cells in the nose send out signals that recruit specialized white blood cells to the site of the infection. In turn, these cells emit a range of immune system chemicals such as kinins. These chemicals probably lead to the symptoms of the common cold by causing swelling and inflammation of the nasal membranes, leakage of proteins and fluid from capillaries and lymph vessels, and the increased production of mucus. (Source: excerpt from The Common Cold, NIAID Fact Sheet: NIAID)
Medical news summaries relating to Common cold:
The following medical news items are relevant to causes of Common cold:
- Bird flu in humans
- Boosting the immune system naturally
- Call to discontinue prescribing antibiotics for colds
- Hepatitis is a contagious often misdiagnosed disease
- More news »
Related information on causes of Common cold:
As with all medical conditions, there may be many causal factors. Further relevant information on causes of Common cold may be found in:
Causes of Common cold: Online Medical Books
16 MEDICAL BOOKS ONLINE! Review excerpts from medical books online, free, without registration, for more information about the causes of Common cold.
Fever:
Differential Diagnosis
(In a Page: Signs and Symptoms)
- Infection is the most common cause
–Viral (e.g., influenza, HIV, hepatitis, herpes simplex encephalitis, mononucleosis, adenovirus)
–Bacterial (e.g., pneumonia, endocarditis, tuberculosis, meningitis, pyelonephritis, appendicitis, cholecystitis, cellulitis)
–Lyme disease
–Malaria
–Syphilis
–Tularemia
–Intra-abdominal abscess
-
Malignancy
–Lymphoma (Hodgkin's and non-Hodgkin's)
–Lymphoproliferative disorders
–Renal cell carcinoma
–Leukemia
–Hepatocellular carcinoma -
Rheumatologic disorders
–Temporal arteritis/giant cell arteritis
–Adult-onset Still's disease
–Systemic lupus erythematosus
–Sarcoidosis
–Rheumatoid arthritis -
Drug fever
–Often temporally associated with the initiation of a new medicine
–Often associated with a rash (biopsy reveals leukocytoclastic vasculitis)
–Eosinophilia is common
-
Pulmonary embolism
–Mild fever is often present
–Other findings of thromboembolic disease (e.g., leg swelling, dyspnea) may be present
Source: In a Page: Signs and Symptoms, 2004
Sore Throat:
Differential Diagnosis
(In a Page: Signs and Symptoms)
- Viral pharyngitis/laryngitis
–Most common cause of sore throat
–Associated with cough, low-grade fever, nasal congestion, and sneezing
–Influenza occasionally causes sore throat with high fever, cough, severe myalgias
–Rhino-, adeno-, coxsackie-, and herpesvirus
–Acute HIV infection
- Mononucleosis
–Associated with fever, headache, and excessive fatigue
–Most common in teen and college ages
–May have associated lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, hepatitis, or encephalitis - Streptococcal pharyngitis
–May be associated with scarlatiniform rash, fever >101°F (>38.3°C), exudative pharyngitis, tender cervical lymphadenopathy, and absence of cough
–More common in winter months, ages 5–10, and with history of group A Streptococcus exposure - Allergic pharyngitis
- Gonococcal pharyngitis
- Fungal pharyngitis (e.g., Candida)
-
Foreign body in throat
–Most often occurs in smaller children
–Associated with sudden onset of audible wheezing, stridor, drooling - GERD
- Sore throat secondary to postnasal drip
- Irritation secondary to inhalants (e.g., cigarette smoke), chemicals (e.g., alcohol), hot foods
- Voice abuse (e.g., excessive screaming)
- Deep neck space infections (e.g., retropharyngeal abscess, peritonsillar abscess, Ludwig's angina)
-
Epiglottitis/bacterial tracheitis
–Occurs in children ages 2–7 and increasingly in adults - Diphtheria
- Trauma
- Lymphadenitis (cervical)
- Cancer (e.g., tonsillar, tongue, laryngeal, esophageal)
- Caustic ingestions
- Thyroiditis
- Angina/acute coronary syndrome
Source: In a Page: Signs and Symptoms, 2004
Cough - Productive:
Differential Diagnosis
(In a Page: Signs and Symptoms)
- Postnasal drip (e.g., chronic sinusitis, allergic rhinitis)
–Most common cause of chronic cough in nonsmokers - Acute bronchitis
–Most commonly caused by viruses (e.g., influenza, adenovirus, rhinovirus, RSV)
–Bacteria are much less common (e.g., Streptococcus pneumoniae, Mycoplasma, Haemophilus influenzae) - Pneumonia
–May be community-acquired, hospital-acquired, or due to aspiration
–“Typical” pneumonia (e.g., S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae, influenza virus) has acute or subacute onset of fever, dyspnea, fatigue, pleuritic chest pain, and productive cough
–“Atypical” pneumonia (e.g., Mycoplasma, Legionella, Chlamydia, Pneumocystis carinii) has more gradual onset, dry cough, headache, fatigue - Smoker's cough
-
Lung cancer
–90% of cases due to smoking (other risk factors include radon, asbestos, pollutants) - Asthma with secondary infection
- COPD (chronic bronchitis component)
-
Congestive heart failure
–Associated with “frothy” sputum - Tuberculosis
Source: In a Page: Signs and Symptoms, 2004
Cough - Nonproductive:
Differential Diagnosis
(In a Page: Signs and Symptoms)
- Smoker's cough
-
Postnasal drip (e.g., chronic sinusitis, allergic rhinitis)
–Most common cause of chronic cough in nonsmokers
-
GERD
–Second most common cause of chronic cough in nonsmokers
-
Asthma/reactive airway disease
–Classic triad of chronic cough, dyspnea, and wheezing
–Most commonly caused by viruses (e.g., influenza, adenovirus, rhinovirus, RSV)
–Postviral bronchitis may last beyond 6 weeks
–“Typical” pneumonia (e.g., Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, or influenza/parainfluenza viruses) is characterized by acute or subacute onset of fever, dyspnea, fatigue, pleuritic chest pain, and cough
–“Atypical” pneumonia (e.g., Mycoplasma, Legionella, Chlamydia) is characterized by more gradual onset, dry cough, headache, fatigue, and minimal lung signs
–Abrupt onset of unilateral wheezing or stridor, cough, decreased breath sounds
–Leading cause of home accidental death in children younger than 6 (boys >girls)
-
Lung cancer
–90% of cases due to smoking (other risk factors include radon, asbestos, pollutants)
-
Cryptogenic organizing pneumonia
–Most commonly occurs following viral infection or exposure
Source: In a Page: Signs and Symptoms, 2004
Rash with Fever:
Differential Diagnosis
(In a Page: Signs and Symptoms)
- Viral exanthems
–Leading cause of fever and rash in childhood
–Most children present with low-grade fevers, viral prodromal symptoms, and a secondary diffuse exanthem that is usually nonspecific and morbilliform
–Often last only a few days and requires only supportive management -
Drug reactions
–Account for a large portion of rashes with associated fever
–Immune complex disease or serum sickness has been reported with many medications -
Meningococcemia
–Most common under age 1
–After a brief prodrome; onset is abrupt with spiking fevers, diffuse purpuric lesions, delirium, and death
–DIC and purpura fulminans with secondary necrosis of digits and limbs can occur
- Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
–A fulminant and deadly rickettsial disease transmitted by a tick bite
–Only 60% of patients are aware of tick bite
–Characteristic rash starts acrally on wrists and ankles and spreads toward the trunk
–Initially, pink macules evolve over 10–24 hours into red papules, then purpuric macules and violaceous patches involving most of the body surface area
–Necrosis and DIC may occur - Toxic shock syndrome, Staphylococcus aureus, and streptococcal diseases
–Most cases due to toxin production
–Rapid onset of fever, hypotension with generalized skin (palms and soles common) and mucous membrane erythema (“erythroderma” in case definition), and subsequent multiorgan failure
–Palmar/solar desquamation in 1–3 weeks
–A morbilliform rash and skin “pain” or hyperesthesia is common
–Nonsurgical and surgical wounds are often the source of infection in the more common nonmenstrual variant of TSS
- Fifth disease
- Measles
- Rubella
- Parvovirus
- Varicella
Source: In a Page: Signs and Symptoms, 2004
Sore Throat:
Differential Diagnosis
(In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms)
–Viral
–Adenovirus
–Rhinovirus
–Parainfluenza
–Influenza
–Coronavirus
–Others: EBV RSV, CMV, HSV
–Bacterial
–Streptococcus
–Haemophilus
–Moraxella
–Staphylococcus
–Corynebacterium
–Fungal
–Candida
-
Inflammatory
–Allergy
–Gastroesophageal reflux disease
–Sinusitis resulting in postnasal drainage -
Tumors
–Leukemia
–Rhabdosarcomas
–Squamous cell carcinoma secondary to oral ulcerations -
Trauma
–Foreign body ingestion
–Caustic ingestion
–Soft tissue injury from accidental and nonaccidental trauma -
Systemic/rheumatologic disorders
–Kawasaki disease: Mucocutaneous lymph node syndrome may have sore throat at presentation (other oral findings include strawberry tongue, fissured lips, mucosal erythema, fever, and lymphadenopathy)
–Behçet syndrome
–Reiter syndrome- Others
–Cigarette smoke
–Environmental pollutants
–Pharyngeal drying: Mouth and pharynx can be dry from mouth breathing, more common in the winter months
- Others
Source: In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Fever – Cyclic:
Differential Diagnosis
(In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms)
-
PFAPA, or Marshall syndrome
–Periodic fever (usually high, 104°F [40°C]), aphthous stomatitis, pharyngitis, and adenitis
–Most common diagnosis for true cyclic fever, usually in children <5 years
–Recurs every 3–4 weeks -
Cyclic neutropenia
–Periodic fever, average cycle of 21 days
–Pharyngitis, mouth ulcers, and lymphadenopathy are also noted
–May not be associated with infection -
Infectious diseases
–Relapsing fever due to Borrelia recurrentis,
relapses every 10–14 days
–EBV may occur at 6–8 week intervals -
Familial Mediterranean fever
–Brief attacks of fever and serositis
–Autosomal recessive disease
–Sephardic Jews, Arabs, Turks, and Armenians commonly affected
–50% have onset before 10 years of age
–May occur in regular 7–28-day intervals
–Amyloidosis is a possible complication -
Hyper-IgD and periodic fever syndrome (HIDS)
–High fevers, abdominal pain, cervical lymphadenopathy, sometimes diarrhea and arthritis, in early infancy
–Autosomal recessive, most patients from Western Europe (French, Dutch)
–Cycles may be regular every 14–28 days- TNF-receptor-associated periodic syndrome (TRAPS) or Hibernian fever
–Fever, myalgias with migratory pattern, conjunctivitis and rash
–Autosomal dominant
–first described in Irish/Scottish individuals but other ethnic groups involved
–Amyloidosis is a possible complication (25% of untreated individuals)
-
Familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome or familial cold urticaria
–Rash, fever, arthralgia, and conjunctivitis
–Precipitated by exposure to cold - Factitious fever
- TNF-receptor-associated periodic syndrome (TRAPS) or Hibernian fever
Source: In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Fever – Recurrent:
Differential Diagnosis
(In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms)
-
Repeated viral infections
–Most common cause of recurrent febrile episodes in childhood
–Start of day care or change of geographic location may be related -
Urinary tract infection (UTI)
–May be self-limited but recur especially if underlying anomaly exists -
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)
–May present with recurrent febrile episodes due to one initial infection -
Other specific viral syndromes
–Parvovirus B19
–CMV -
Immunodeficiency
–Repeated bacterial infections should lead to investigation of immune status - Dental abscess (non-dental abscesses typically present with prolonged daily fever)
- Chronic meningococcemia
- Acute rheumatic fever
- Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD)
- Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA)
- Behçet disease
-
Tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated periodic syndrome (TRAPS) or Hibernian Fever
–Autosomal dominant disease with fever, myalgias with migratory pattern, conjunctivitis and rash -
Familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome or familial cold urticaria
–Rash, fever, arthralgia, and conjunctivitis
–Precipitated by exposure to cold -
Muckle-Wells syndrome
–Similar presentation to familial cold urticaria
–Symptoms not triggered by cold -
Brucellosis
–Most prevalent around the Mediterranean and Arabic countries, also present in South America and India - Yersiniosis
- Typhoid fever
- Rat-bite fever
- Malaria
- Factitious fever
Source: In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Fever – Unknown Origin:
Differential Diagnosis
(In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms)
- Infections (40%)
–Infectious mononucleosis (EBV, CMV)
–Other systemic viral syndromes (e.g., HIV)
–UTI (e.g., E. coli)
–Osteomyelitis (e.g., staphylococcus)
–Upper and lower respiratory infections (sinusitis, mastoiditis, pneumonia)
–Cat-scratch disease (Bartonella henselae)
–Tuberculosis, nontuberculous mycobacterial infections
–Abscess (abdominal or retroperitoneal)
–CNS infections
–Endocarditis (subacute)
–Salmonellosis
–Lyme disease (Borrelia burgdorferi)
–Leptospirosis
–Congenital syphilis
–Others: Brucellosis, histoplasmosis, leishmaniasis, yersiniosis, Q fever (Coxiella burnetii), Rocky Mountain spotted fever (Rickettsia rickettsii)
-
Autoimmune diseases (15%)
–Rheumatoid arthritis accounts for 3/4 of FUO due to autoimmune diseases
–Systemic lupus erythematosus
–Rheumatic fever
–Vasculitis (e.g., HSP)
–Sarcoidosis -
Neoplastic diseases (7%)
–Leukemia/lymphoma accounts for 80% of
FUO due to malignancies
–Neuroblastoma
–Hepatoma
–Soft tissue sarcoma - Inflammatory bowel disease (3%)
- Drugs and nutritional supplements (drug fever)
- Factitious fever
- Munchausen by proxy
-
Neurologic disorders
–Familial dysautonomia
–Central thermoregulatory disorder
–Head injury - Hyperthyroidism
- Anhidrotic ectodermal dysplasia
- Diabetes insipidus
- Kikuchi disease
Source: In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Cough – Acute:
Differential Diagnosis
(In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms)
- Upper airway disease
–URI or common cold accounts for much pediatric coughing (influenza, parainfluenza, rhinovirus)
–Chronic sinusitis, tonsillitis, laryngitis, and croup are other common infections
–Allergic disease
–Vocal cord dysfunction (VCD)
- Lower airway disease
–Asthma is inflammatory triad of edema, mucus, and bronchospasm, characterized by reversibility with asthma drugs (the most common triggers for asthma are viral disease, irritants such as ETS, allergic disease, and gastroesophageal reflux)
–Infectious diseases: Bronchiolitis, caused by RSV in babies, causes cough from inflammatory changes and debris; bronchitis is more common in older children and may be secondary to smoking or ETS exposure; other viral lower airway diseases include adenovirus, influenza, and parainfluenza
–Foreign body aspiration
–Chronic diseases (e.g., cystic fibrosis and bronchiectasis) and structural abnormalities (e.g., PCD, TEF, or cleft, rings, and slings) may present with intermittent rather than chronic cough
- Parenchymal and pleural disease
–Infectious diseases account almost exclusively for all parenchymal and pleural causes of cough (i.e., pneumonia and empyema)
–Usual infectious agents include bacterial disease (e.g., streptococcal, staphylococcal) and atypical pneumonias (e.g., Mycoplasma pneumoniae), TB
–Irritation of a branch of cranial nerve ten in the external auditory canal can trigger cough
Source: In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Cough – Chronic:
Differential Diagnosis
(In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms)
- Lower airway disease
–Asthma
–Inflammatory triad of edema, mucus, and bronchospasm, characterized by reversibility with asthma drugs
–The most common triggers for asthma are viral disease, irritants (e.g., ETS), allergic disease, and GER
–Airway infections: Bronchiolitis, caused by RSV in babies, may cause chronic cough from persistent inflammatory change and debris; bronchitis is more common in older children and may be secondary to smoking or ETS exposure
–Foreign body: Associated with endobronchial infection and damage
–Cystic fibrosis: The most common life-threatening inherited illness of whites, is associated with production of chronically infected sputum
–Bronchiectasis: Chronic infection and damage to the airway; may be secondary to another disease (e.g., TB or CF)
–Structural abnormalities: PCD, TEF, or cleft, rings, slings
-
Upper airway disease
–Infectious diseases: Chronic sinusitis, tonsillitis, laryngitis, including that secondary to GER (although acute disorders, the inflammation from URI may be associated with a chronic cough if frequent enough) -
Parenchymal and pleural disease
–Infectious disease accounts almost exclusively for all parenchymal and pleural causes of cough (e.g., pneumonia and empyema)- CNS causes
–CNS causes of cough include “habit cough” (or psychogenic cough), Tourette disease associated “cough tic” or throat clearing, VCD
–Irritation of a branch of cranial nerve ten in the external auditory canal can trigger chronic cough
- CNS causes
Source: In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Fever – Acute:
Differential Diagnosis
(In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms)
-
Viral infections
–Account for the majority of febrile illnesses (FI) in infancy and childhood
–Upper respiratory infections (e.g., parainfluenza virus)
–Lower respiratory infections (e.g., RSV)
–Non-bacterial gastroenteritis (e.g., rotavirus)
–Aseptic meningitis (e.g., enterovirus) -
Bacterial infections
–UTIs account for 1.7% of FI in children 5 years and 7.5% in infants <8 weeks
–Pneumonia (e.g., group A streptococcus)
–Bacteremia (2% of FI in all children, highest rates seen in younger infants)
–Meningitis (0.8% of FI in all children)
–In febrile neonates, the overall rate of serious bacterial infections (SBI) is ~13% - Vaccine reaction
- Collagen vascular diseases
–Kawasaki disease: 3,000 cases per year in the U.S., rates higher in Asia, 80% of cases occur in children <5 years
–Henoch-Schönlein purpura: Low-grade fever is present in 50% of cases
–Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis: Incidence 1/10,000
–SLE
–Acute rheumatic fever
- Malignancy
–Leukemia: Most common childhood malignancy; early symptoms include fever, fatigue, pallor, anemia, bone pain
–Lymphoma
–Solid tumors (neuroblastoma, sarcoma)
-
Inflammatory bowel disease
–Diarrhea, pain, fever, blood loss
–Crohn disease, ulcerative colitis - Tissue injury (trauma, hematoma, burns)
- Drug reaction
- Biologic agents (blood products, gamma-globulin)
-
Endocrinologic disorders
–Thyrotoxicosis
–Pheochromocytoma -
Genetic diseases
–Familial Mediterranean fever - Factitious fever
- Collagen vascular diseases
Source: In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Cough, barking:
Medical causes
(Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition))
Aspiration of foreign body.
Partial obstruction of the upper airway first produces sudden hoarseness, and then a barking cough and inspiratory stridor. Other effects of this life-threatening condition include gagging, tachycardia, dyspnea, decreased breath sounds, wheezing and, possibly, cyanosis.
Epiglottiditis.
Epiglottiditis is a life-threatening disorder that has become less common since the use of influenza vaccines. It occurs nocturnally, heralded by a barking cough and a high fever. The child is hoarse, dysphagic, dyspneic, and restless and appears extremely ill and panicky. The cough may progress to severe respiratory distress with sternal and intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, cyanosis, and tachycardia. The child will struggle to get sufficient air as epiglottic edema increases. Epiglottiditis is a true medical emergency.
Laryngotracheobronchitis (acute).
Also known as viral croup, laryngotracheobronchitis is most common in children between ages 9 and 18 months and usually occurs in the fall and early winter. It initially produces a low to moderate fever, a runny nose, a poor appetite, and an infrequent cough. When the infection descends into the laryngotracheal area, a barking cough, hoarseness, and inspiratory stridor occur.
As respiratory distress progresses, substernal and intercostal retractions occur along with tachycardia and shallow, rapid respirations. Sleeping in a dry room worsens these signs. The patient becomes restless, irritable, pale, and cyanotic.
Spasmodic croup.
Acute spasmodic croup usually occurs during sleep with the abrupt onset of a barking cough that awakens the child. Typically, he doesn't have a fever, but may be hoarse, restless, and dyspneic. As his respiratory distress worsens, the child may exhibit sternal and intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, tachycardia, cyanosis, and an anxious, frantic appearance. The signs usually subside within a few hours, but attacks tend to recur.
Source: Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition), 2006
Cough, productive:
Medical causes
(Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition))
Actinomycosis.
Actinomycosis begins with a cough that produces purulent sputum. A fever, weight loss, fatigue, weakness, dyspnea, night sweats, pleuritic chest pain, and hemoptysis may also occur.
Aspiration pneumonitis.
Aspiration pneumonitis causes coughing that produces pink, frothy and, possibly, purulent sputum. The patient also has marked dyspnea, a fever, tachypnea, tachycardia, wheezing, and cyanosis.
Bronchiectasis.
The chronic cough of bronchiectasis produces copious, mucopurulent sputum that has characteristic layering (top, frothy; middle, clear; bottom, dense with purulent particles). The patient has halitosis; his sputum may smell foul or sickeningly sweet. Other characteristic findings include hemoptysis, persistent coarse crackles over the affected lung area, occasional wheezing, rhonchi, exertional dyspnea, weight loss, fatigue, malaise, weakness, a recurrent fever, and late-stage finger clubbing.
Bronchitis (chronic).
Bronchitis causes a cough that may be nonproductive initially. Eventually, however, it produces mucoid sputum that becomes purulent. Secondary infection can also cause mucopurulent sputum, which may become blood-tinged and foul-smelling. The coughing, which may be paroxysmal during exercise, usually occurs when the patient is recumbent or rises from sleep.
The patient also exhibits prolonged expirations, increased use of accessory muscles for breathing, barrel chest, tachypnea, cyanosis, wheezing, exertional dyspnea, scattered rhonchi, coarse crackles (which can be precipitated by coughing), and late-stage clubbing.
Chemical pneumonitis.
Chemical pneumonitis causes a cough with purulent sputum. It can also cause dyspnea, wheezing, orthopnea, a fever, malaise, and crackles; mucous membrane irritation of the conjunctivae, throat, and nose; laryngitis; or rhinitis. Signs and symptoms may increase for 24 to 48 hours after exposure, then resolve; if severe, however, they may recur 2 to 5 weeks later.
Common cold.
When the common cold causes productive coughing, the sputum is mucoid or mucopurulent. Early indications include a dry hacking cough, sneezing, a headache, malaise, fatigue, rhinorrhea (watery to tenacious, mucopurulent secretions), nasal congestion, a sore throat, myalgia, and arthralgia.
Lung abscess (ruptured).
The cardinal sign of a ruptured lung abscess is coughing that produces copious amounts of purulent, foul-smelling, and possibly blood-tinged sputum. A ruptured abscess can also cause diaphoresis, anorexia, clubbing, weight loss, weakness, fatigue, a fever with chills, dyspnea, a headache, malaise, pleuritic chest pain, halitosis, inspiratory crackles, and tubular or amphoric breath sounds. The patient's chest is dull on percussion on the affected side.
Lung cancer.
One of the earliest signs of bronchogenic carcinoma is a chronic cough that produces small amounts of purulent (or mucopurulent), blood-streaked sputum. In a patient with bronchoalveolar cancer, however, coughing produces large amounts of frothy sputum. Other signs and symptoms include dyspnea, anorexia, fatigue, weight loss, chest pain, a fever, diaphoresis, wheezing, and clubbing.
Nocardiosis.
Nocardiosis causes a productive cough (with purulent, thick, tenacious, and possibly blood-tinged sputum) and fever that may last several months. Other findings include night sweats, pleuritic pain, anorexia, malaise, fatigue, weight loss, and diminished or absent breath sounds. The patient's chest is dull on percussion.
North American blastomycosis.
North American blastomycosis is a chronic disorder that produces coughing that's dry and hacking or produces bloody or purulent sputum. Other findings include pleuritic chest pain, a fever, chills, anorexia, weight loss, malaise, fatigue, night sweats, cutaneous lesions (small, painless, nonpruritic macules or papules), and prostration.
Plague
(Yersinia pestis). Plague is one of the most virulent acute bacterial infections and, if untreated, one of the most potentially lethal diseases known. Most cases are sporadic, but the potential for epidemic spread still exists. Clinical forms include bubonic (the most common), septicemic, and pneumonic plagues. The bubonic form is transmitted to a human when bitten by an infected flea. Signs and symptoms include a fever, chills, and swollen, inflamed, and tender lymph nodes near the site of the flea bite. Septicemic plague develops as a fulminant illness generally with the bubonic form. The pneumonic form may be contracted from person-to-person through direct contact via the respiratory system or through biological warfare from aerosolization and inhalation of the organism. The onset is usually sudden with chills, a fever, a headache, and myalgia. Pulmonary signs and symptoms include a productive cough, chest pain, tachypnea, dyspnea, hemoptysis, increasing respiratory distress, and cardiopulmonary insufficiency.
Pneumonia.
Bacterial pneumonia initially produces a dry cough that becomes productive. Associated signs and symptoms develop suddenly and include shaking chills, a high fever, myalgia, a headache, pleuritic chest pain that increases with chest movement, tachypnea, tachycardia, dyspnea, cyanosis, diaphoresis, decreased breath sounds, fine crackles, and rhonchi.
Mycoplasma pneumonia may cause a cough that produces scant blood-flecked sputum. Typically, however, a nonproductive cough starts 2 to 3 days after the onset of malaise, a headache, a fever, and a sore throat. Paroxysmal coughing causes substernal chest pain. Patients may develop crackles, but generally don't appear seriously ill.
Psittacosis.
As psittacosis progresses, the characteristic hacking cough, nonproductive at first, may later produce a small amount of mucoid, blood-streaked sputum. The infection may begin abruptly, with chills, a fever, a headache, myalgia, and prostration. Other signs and symptoms include tachypnea, fine crackles, chest pain (rare), epistaxis, photophobia, abdominal distention and tenderness, nausea, vomiting, and a faint macular rash. Severe infection may produce stupor, delirium, and coma.
Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis.
Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis causes a nonproductive or slightly productive cough with a fever, occasional chills, pleuritic chest pain, a sore throat, a headache, backache, malaise, marked weakness, anorexia, hemoptysis, and an itchy macular rash. Rhonchi and wheezing may be heard. The disease may spread to other areas, causing arthralgia, swelling of the knees and ankles, and erythema nodosum or erythema multiforme.
Pulmonary edema.
When severe, pulmonary edema, which is a life-threatening disorder, causes a cough that produces frothy, bloody sputum. Early signs and symptoms include exertional dyspnea; paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, followed by orthopnea; and coughing, which may be nonproductive initially. Others include a fever, fatigue, tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, and a ventricular gallop. As the patient's respirations become increasingly rapid and labored, he develops more diffuse crackles and a productive cough, worsening tachycardia and, possibly, arrhythmias. His skin becomes cold, clammy, and cyanotic; his blood pressure falls; and his pulse becomes thready.
Pulmonary embolism.
Pulmonary embolism is a life-threatening disorder that causes a cough that may be nonproductive or may produce blood-tinged sputum. Usually, the first symptom of a pulmonary embolism is severe dyspnea, which may be accompanied by angina or pleuritic chest pain. The patient experiences marked anxiety, a low-grade fever, tachycardia, tachypnea, and diaphoresis. Less-common signs include massive hemoptysis, chest splinting, leg edema and, with a large embolus, cyanosis, syncope, and jugular vein distention. The patient may also have a pleural friction rub, diffuse wheezing, crackles, chest dullness on percussion, decreased breath sounds, and signs of circulatory collapse.
Pulmonary tuberculosis (TB).
Pulmonary TB causes a mild to severe productive cough along with some combination of hemoptysis, malaise, dyspnea, and pleuritic chest pain. Sputum may be scant and mucoid or copious and purulent. Typically, the patient experiences night sweats, easy fatigability, and weight loss. His breath sounds are amphoric. He may have chest dullness on percussion and, after coughing, increased tactile fremitus with crackles.
Silicosis.
A productive cough with mucopurulent sputum is the earliest sign of silicosis. The patient also has exertional dyspnea, tachypnea, weight loss, fatigue, general weakness, and recurrent respiratory infections. Auscultation reveals end-inspiratory, fine crackles at the lung bases.
Tracheobronchitis.
Inflammation initially causes a nonproductive cough that later — following the onset of chills, a sore throat, a slight fever, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness — becomes productive as secretions increase. Sputum is mucoid, mucopurulent, or purulent. The patient typically has rhonchi and wheezes; he may also develop crackles. Severe tracheobronchitis may cause a fever of 101° to 102° F (38.3° to 38.9° C) and bronchospasm.
Other causes
Diagnostic tests.
Bronchoscopy and pulmonary function tests (PFTs) may increase productive coughing.
Drugs.
Expectorants increase productive coughing. These include ammonium chloride, calcium iodide, guaifenesin, iodinated glycerol, potassium iodide, and terpin hydrate.
Respiratory therapy.
Intermittent positive-pressure breathing, nebulizer therapy, and incentive spirometry can help loosen secretions and cause or increase productive coughing.
Source: Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition), 2006
Earache:
Medical causes
(Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition))
Abscess (extradural)
Severe earache accompanied by a persistent ipsilateral headache, malaise, and a recurrent mild fever characterizes an abscess, which is a serious complication of middle ear infection.
Barotrauma (acute)
Earache associated with barotrauma ranges from mild pressure to severe pain. Tympanic membrane ecchymosis or bleeding into the tympanic cavity may occur, producing a blue drumhead; the eardrum usually isn't perforated.
Cerumen impaction
Impacted cerumen (earwax) may cause a sensation of blockage or fullness in the ear. Additional features include partial hearing loss, itching and, possibly, dizziness.
Herpes zoster oticus (Ramsay Hunt syndrome)
Herpes zoster oticus causes burning or stabbing ear pain, commonly associated with ear vesicles. The patient also complains of hearing loss and vertigo. Associated signs and symptoms include transitory, ipsilateral, facial paralysis; partial loss of taste; tongue vesicles; and nausea and vomiting.
Keratosis obturans
Mild ear pain is common with keratosis obturans, along with otorrhea and tinnitus. Inspection reveals a white glistening plug obstructing the external meatus.
Mastoiditis (acute)
Mastoiditiscauses a dull ache behind the ear accompanied by a low-grade fever (99 to 100 F [37.2 to 37.87 C]). The eardrum appears dull and edematous and may perforate, and soft tissue near the eardrum may sag. A purulent discharge is seen in the external canal.
Ménière's disease
Ménière's disease is an inner ear disorder that can produce a sensation of fullness in the affected ear. Its classic effects, however, include severe vertigo, tinnitus, and sensorineural hearing loss. The patient may also experience nausea and vomiting, diaphoresis, and nystagmus.Otitis externa
Earache characterizes acute and malignant otitis externa. Acute otitis externa begins with mild to moderate ear pain that occurs with tragus manipulation. The pain may be accompanied by a low-grade fever, sticky yellow or purulent ear discharge, partial hearing loss, and a feeling of blockage. Later, ear pain intensifies, causing the entire side of the head to ache and throb. Fever may reach 104 F (40 C). Examination reveals swelling of the tragus, external meatus, and external canal; eardrum erythema; and lymphadenopathy. The patient also complains of dizziness and malaise.Malignant otitis externa abruptly causes ear pain that's aggravated by moving the auricle or tragus. The pain is accompanied by intense itching, purulent ear discharge, a fever, parotid gland swelling, and trismus. Examination reveals a swollen external canal with exposed cartilage and temporal bone. Cranial nerve palsy may occur.
Otitis media (acute)
Otitis media is middle ear inflammation that may be serous or suppurative. Acute serous otitis media may cause a feeling of fullness in the ear, hearing loss, and a vague sensation of top-heaviness. The eardrum may be slightly retracted, amber, and marked by air bubbles and a meniscus, or it may be blue-black from hemorrhage.Severe, deep, throbbing ear pain; hearing loss; and a fever that may reach 102 F (38.9 C) characterize acute suppurative otitis media.
The pain increases steadily over several hours or days and may be aggravated by pressure on the mastoid antrum. Perforation of the eardrum is possible. Before rupture, the eardrum appears bulging and fiery red. Rupture causes purulent drainage and relieves the pain.
Chronic otitis media usually isn't painful except during exacerbations. Persistent pain and discharge from the ear suggest osteomyelitis of the skull base or cancer.
Source: Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition), 2006
Fever:
Medical causes
(Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition))
Anthrax, cutaneous
The patient may experience a fever along with lymphadenopathy, malaise, and a headache. After the bacterium
Bacillus anthracisenters a cut or abrasion on the skin, the infection begins as a small, painless, or pruritic macular or papular lesion resembling an insect bite. Within 1 to 2 days, the lesion develops into a vesicle and then into a painless ulcer with a characteristic black, necrotic centerAnthrax, GI
Following the ingestion of contaminated meat from an animal infected with the bacterium
B. anthracis,the patient experiences a fever, a loss of appetite, nausea, and vomiting. The patient may also experience abdominal pain, severe bloody diarrhea, and hematemesisAnthrax, inhalation
The initial signs and symptoms of inhalation anthrax are flulike, including a fever, chills, weakness, a cough, and chest pain. The disease generally occurs in two stages, with a period of recovery after the initial symptoms. The second stage develops abruptly with rapid deterioration marked by a fever, dyspnea, stridor, and hypotension, generally leading to death within 24 hours
Escherichia coli O157:H7
A fever, bloody diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, and abdominal cramps occur after eating undercooked beef or other foods contaminated with this strain of bacteria. In children younger than age 5 and in elderly patients, hemolytic uremic syndrome may develop (in which the red blood cells are destroyed), and this may ultimately lead to acute renal failure.
Immune complex dysfunction
When present, a fever usually remains low, although moderate elevations may accompany erythema multiforme. Fever may be remittent or intermittent, as in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) or systemic lupus erythematosus, or sustained, as in polyarteritis. As one of several vague, prodromal complaints (such as fatigue, anorexia, and weight loss), a fever produces nocturnal diaphoresis and accompanies such associated signs and symptoms as diarrhea and a persistent cough (with AIDS) or morning stiffness (with rheumatoid arthritis). Other disease-specific findings include a headache and vision loss (temporal arteritis); pain and stiffness in the neck, shoulders, back, or pelvis (ankylosing spondylitis and polymyalgia rheumatica); skin and mucous membrane lesions (erythema multiforme); and urethritis with urethral discharge and conjunctivitis (Reiter’s syndrome)
Infectious and inflammatory disorders
A fever ranges from low (in patients with Crohn’s disease or ulcerative colitis) to extremely high (in those with bacterial pneumonia, necrotizing fasciitis, or
Ebola or
Hantavirus). It may be remittent, as in those with infectious mononucleosis or otitis media; hectic (recurring daily with sweating, chills, and flushing), as in those with lung abscess, influenza, or endocarditis; sustained, as in those with meningitis; or relapsing, as in those with malaria. A fever may arise abruptly, as in those with toxic shock syndrome or Rocky Mountain spotted fever, or insidiously, as in those with mycoplasmal pneumonia. In patients with hepatitis, a fever may represent a disease prodrome; in those with appendicitis, it follows the acute stage. Its sudden late appearance with tachycardia, tachypnea, and confusion heralds life-threatening septic shock in patients with peritonitis or gram-negative bacteremia.Associated signs and symptoms involve every system. The cyclic variations of hectic fever typically produce alternating chills and diaphoresis. General systemic complaints include weakness, anorexia, and malaise.
Listeriosis
Signs and symptoms of listeriosis include a fever, myalgia, abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. If the infection spreads to the nervous system, meningitis may develop; symptoms include a fever, a headache, nuchal rigidity, and a change in the LOC
Gender cue
Infections during pregnancy may lead to premature delivery, infection of the neonate, or stillbirth.
Neoplasms
Primary neoplasms and metastases can produce a prolonged fever of varying elevations. For instance, acute leukemia may present insidiously with a low-grade fever, pallor, and bleeding tendencies or more abruptly with a high fever, frank bleeding, and prostration. Occasionally, Hodgkin’s disease produces an undulant fever or Pel-Ebstein fever, an irregularly relapsing feverIn addition to a fever and nocturnal diaphoresis, neoplastic disease typically causes anorexia, fatigue, malaise, and weight loss. Examination may reveal lesions, lymphadenopathy, palpable masses, and hepatosplenomegaly.
Plague
Yersinia pestisThe bubonic form of plague(transmitted to man when bitten by infected fleas) causes a fever, chills, and swollen, inflamed, and tender lymph nodes near the bite site. The septicemic form develops as a fulminant illness generally with the bubonic form. The pneumonic form manifests as a sudden onset of chills, a fever, a headache, and myalgia after person-to-person transmission via the respiratory tract. Other signs and symptoms of the pneumonic form include a productive cough, chest pain, tachypnea, dyspnea, hemoptysis, increasing respiratory distress, and cardiopulmonary insufficiency
Q fever
Q fever is a rickettsial disease that’s caused by the infection of
Coxiella burnetii
It causes a fever, chills, a severe headache, malaise, chest pain, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. The fever may last up to 2 weeks. In severe cases, the patient may develop hepatitis or pneumonia.
Rhabdomyolysis
Rhabdomyolysis results in muscle breakdown and release of the muscle cell contents (myoglobin) into the bloodstream, with signs and symptoms that include a fever, muscle weakness or pain, nausea, vomiting, malaise, or dark urine. Acute renal failure is the most commonly reported complication of the disorder. It results from renal structure obstruction and injury during the kidney’s attempt to filter the myoglobin from the bloodstream
Rift Valley fever
Typical signs and symptoms of Rift Valley fever include a fever, myalgia, weakness, dizziness, and back pain. A small percentage of patients may develop encephalitis or may progress to hemorrhagic fever that can lead to shock and hemorrhage. Inflammation of the retina may result in some permanent vision loss
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)
SARS is an acute infectious disease of unknown etiology; however, a novel coronavirus has been implicated as a possible cause. Although most cases have been reported in Asia (China, Vietnam, Singapore, Thailand), cases have been documented in Europe and North America. The incubation period is 2 to 7 days, and the illness generally begins with a fever (usually greater than 100.4° F [38° C]). Other signs and symptoms include a headache, malaise, a dry nonproductive cough, and dyspnea. The severity of the illness is highly variable, ranging from mild illness to pneumonia and, in some cases, progressing to respiratory failure and death
Smallpox (variola major)
Initial signs and symptoms of smallpoxinclude a high fever, malaise, prostration, a severe headache, a backache, and abdominal pain. A maculopapular rash develops on the mucosa of the mouth, pharynx, face, and forearms and then spreads to the trunk and legs. Within 2 days, the rash becomes vesicular and later pustular. The lesions develop at the same time, appear identical, and are more prominent on the face and extremities. The pustules are round, firm, and deeply embedded in the skin. After 8 to 9 days, the pustules form a crust, and later the scab separates from the skin, leaving a pitted scar. In fatal cases, death results from encephalitis, extensive bleeding, or secondary infection
Thermoregulatory dysfunction
Thermoregulatory dysfunction is marked by a sudden onset of fever that rises rapidly and remains as high as 107° F (41.7° C). It occurs in such life-threatening disorders as heatstroke, thyroid storm, neuroleptic malignant syndrome, and malignant hyperthermia and in lesions of the central nervous system (CNS). A low or moderate fever appears in dehydrated patients
A prolonged high fever commonly produces vomiting, anhidrosis, a decreased LOC, and hot, flushed skin. Related cardiovascular effects may include tachycardia, tachypnea, and hypotension. Other disease-specific findings include skin changes, such as dry skin and mucous membranes, poor skin turgor, and oliguria with dehydration; mottled cyanosis with malignant hyperthermia; diarrhea with thyroid storm; and ominous signs of increased intracranial pressure (a decreased LOC with bradycardia, a widened pulse pressure, and an increased systolic pressure) with CNS tumor, trauma, or hemorrhage.
Tularemia
Tularemia, also known as rabbit fever, causes an abrupt onset of a fever, chills, a headache, generalized myalgia, a nonproductive cough, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and empyema
Typhus
Typhus is a rickettsial disease in which the patient initially experiences a headache, myalgia, arthralgia, and malaise. These signs and symptoms are followed by an abrupt onset of a fever, chills, nausea, and vomiting. A maculopapular rash may be present in some cases
West Nile encephalitis
West Nile encephalitis is a brain infection caused by West Nile virus — a mosquito-borne flavivirus that’s commonly found in Africa, West Asia, and the Middle East and rarely in North America. Mild infection is common; signs and symptoms include a fever, a headache, and body aches, usually with skin rash and swollen lymph glands. More severe infection is marked by a high fever, a headache, neck stiffness, stupor, disorientation, coma, tremors, occasional convulsions, paralysis and, rarely, death
Other causes
Diagnostic tests
Immediate or delayed fever infrequently follows radiographic tests that use contrast medium
Drugs
A fever and rash commonly result from hypersensitivity to antifungals, sulfonamides, penicillins, cephalosporins, tetracyclines, barbiturates, phenytoin, quinidine, iodides, phenolphthalein, methyldopa, procainamide, and some antitoxins. A fever can accompany chemotherapy, especially with bleomycin, vincristine, and asparaginase. It can result from drugs that impair sweating, such as anticholinergics, phenothiazines, and monoamine oxidase inhibitors. A drug-induced fever typically disappears after the involved drug is discontinued. A fever can also stem from toxic doses of salicylates, amphetamines, and tricyclic antidepressants
Inhaled anesthetics and muscle relaxants can trigger malignant hyperthermia in patients with this inherited trait.
Treatments
Remittent or intermittent low fever may occur for several days after surgery. Transfusion reactions characteristically produce an abrupt onset of a fever and chills
Source: Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition), 2006
Cough, nonproductive:
Medical causes
(Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition))
Airway occlusion.
Partial occlusion of the upper airway produces a sudden onset of dry, paroxysmal coughing. The patient is gagging, wheezing, and hoarse, with stridor, tachycardia, and decreased breath sounds.
Anthrax (inhalation).
Anthrax is an acute infectious disease that's caused by the gram-positive, spore-forming bacterium Bacillus anthracis. Although the disease most commonly occurs in wild and domestic grazing animals, such as cattle, sheep, and goats, the spores can live in the soil for many years. The disease can occur in humans exposed to infected animals, tissue from infected animals, or biological warfare. Most natural cases occur in agricultural regions worldwide. Anthrax may occur in the cutaneous, inhalation, or GI form.
Inhalation anthrax is caused by inhaling aerosolized spores. Initial signs and symptoms are flulike and include a fever, chills, weakness, a cough, and chest pain. The disease generally occurs in two stages, with a period of recovery after the initial signs and symptoms. The second stage develops abruptly with rapid deterioration marked by a fever, dyspnea, stridor, and hypotension generally leading to death within 24 hours. Radiologic findings include mediastinitis and symmetric mediastinal widening.
Aortic aneurysm (thoracic).
Aortic aneurysm causes a brassy cough with dyspnea, hoarseness, wheezing, and a substernal ache in the shoulders, lower back, or abdomen. The patient may also have facial or neck edema, jugular vein distention, dysphagia, prominent veins over his chest, stridor and, possibly, paresthesia or neuralgia.
Asthma.
Asthma attacks typically occur at night, starting with a nonproductive cough and mild wheezing; this progresses to severe dyspnea, audible wheezing, chest tightness, and a cough that produces thick mucus. Other signs include apprehension, rhonchi, prolonged expirations, intercostal and supraclavicular retractions on inspiration, accessory muscle use, flaring nostrils, tachypnea, tachycardia, diaphoresis, and flushing or cyanosis.
Atelectasis.
As lung tissue deflates, it stimulates cough receptors, causing a nonproductive cough. The patient may also have pleuritic chest pain, anxiety, dyspnea, tachypnea, and tachycardia. His skin may be cyanotic and diaphoretic, his breath sounds may be decreased, his chest may be dull on percussion, and he may exhibit inspiratory lag, substernal or intercostal retractions, decreased vocal fremitus, and tracheal deviation toward the affected side.
Bronchitis (chronic).
Bronchitis starts with a nonproductive, hacking cough that later becomes productive. Other findings include prolonged expiration, wheezing, dyspnea, accessory muscle use, barrel chest, cyanosis, tachypnea, crackles, and scattered rhonchi. Clubbing can occur in late stages.
Bronchogenic carcinoma.
The earliest indicators of bronchogenic carcinoma can be a chronic, nonproductive cough; dyspnea; and vague chest pain. The patient may also be wheezing.
Common cold.
The common cold generally starts with a nonproductive, hacking cough and progresses to some mix of sneezing, headaches, malaise, fatigue, rhinorrhea, myalgia, arthralgia, nasal congestion, and a sore throat.
Esophageal achalasia.
In esophageal achalasia, regurgitation and aspiration produce a dry cough. The patient may also have recurrent pulmonary infections and dysphagia.
Esophageal diverticula.
The patient with esophageal diverticula has a nocturnal nonproductive cough, regurgitation and aspiration, dyspepsia, and dysphagia. His neck may appear swollen and have a gurgling sound. He may also exhibit halitosis and weight loss.
Esophageal occlusion.
Esophageal occlusion is marked by immediate nonproductive coughing and gagging, with a sensation of something stuck in the throat. Other findings include neck or chest pain, dysphagia, and the inability to swallow.
Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome.
A nonproductive cough is common in patients with Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, which is marked by noncardiogenic pulmonary edema. Other findings include a headache, myalgia, fever, nausea, and vomiting.
Hypersensitivity pneumonitis.
With hypersensitivity pneumonitis, an acute nonproductive cough, a fever, dyspnea, and malaise usually occur 5 to 6 hours after exposure to an antigen.
Interstitial lung disease.
A patient with interstitial lung disease has a nonproductive cough and progressive dyspnea. He may also be cyanotic and have clubbing, fine crackles, fatigue, variable chest pain, and weight loss.
Laryngeal tumor.
A mild, nonproductive cough is an early sign of a laryngeal tumor, in addition to minor throat discomfort and hoarseness. Later, dysphagia, dyspnea, cervical lymphadenopathy, stridor, and an earache may occur.
Laryngitis.
In its acute form, laryngitis causes a nonproductive cough with localized pain (especially when the patient is swallowing or speaking) as well as fever and malaise. His hoarseness can range from mild to complete loss of voice.
Lung abscess.
Lung abscess typically begins with a nonproductive cough, weakness, dyspnea, and pleuritic chest pain. The patient may also exhibit diaphoresis, a fever, a headache, malaise, fatigue, crackles, decreased breath sounds, anorexia, and weight loss. Later, his cough produces large amounts of purulent, foul-smelling, and possibly bloody sputum.
Pleural effusion.
A nonproductive cough along with dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and decreased chest motion are characteristic of pleural effusion. Other findings include a pleural friction rub, tachycardia, tachypnea, egophony, flatness on percussion, decreased or absent breath sounds, and decreased tactile fremitus.
Pneumonia.
Bacterial pneumonia usually starts with a nonproductive, hacking, painful cough that rapidly becomes productive. Other findings include shaking chills, a headache, a high fever, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, tachypnea, tachycardia, grunting respirations, nasal flaring, decreased breath sounds, fine crackles, rhonchi, and cyanosis. The patient's chest may be dull on percussion.
With mycoplasma pneumonia, a nonproductive cough arises 2 to 3 days after the onset of malaise, a headache, and a sore throat. The cough can be paroxysmal, causing substernal chest pain. Fever commonly occurs, but the patient doesn't appear seriously ill.
Viral pneumonia causes a nonproductive, hacking cough and the gradual onset of malaise, headache, anorexia, and a low-grade fever.
Pneumothorax.
Pneumothorax is a life-threatening disorder that causes a dry cough and signs of respiratory distress, such as severe dyspnea, tachycardia, tachypnea, and cyanosis. The patient experiences sudden, sharp chest pain that worsens with chest movement as well as subcutaneous crepitation, hyperresonance or tympany, decreased vocal fremitus, and decreased or absent breath sounds on the affected side.
Pulmonary edema.
Pulmonary edema initially causes a dry cough, exertional dyspnea, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, orthopnea, tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, and a ventricular gallop. If pulmonary edema is severe, the patient's respirations become more rapid and labored, with diffuse crackles and coughing that produces frothy, bloody sputum.
Pulmonary embolism.
A life-threatening pulmonary embolism may suddenly produce a dry cough along with dyspnea and pleuritic or anginal chest pain. Typically, however, the cough produces blood-tinged sputum. Tachycardia and a low-grade fever are also common; less common signs and symptoms include massive hemoptysis, chest splinting, leg edema and, with a large embolus, cyanosis, syncope, and jugular vein distention. The patient may also have a pleural friction rub, diffuse wheezing, dullness on percussion, and decreased breath sounds.
Sarcoidosis.
With sarcoidosis, a nonproductive cough is accompanied by dyspnea, substernal pain, and malaise. The patient may also develop fatigue, arthralgia, myalgia, weight loss, tachypnea, crackles, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, skin lesions, visual impairment, difficulty swallowing, and arrhythmias.
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS).
SARS is an acute infectious disease of unknown etiology; however, a novel coronavirus has been implicated as a possible cause. Although most cases have been reported in Asia (China, Vietnam, Singapore, Thailand), cases have cropped up in Europe and North America. The incubation period is 2 to 7 days; the illness generally begins with a fever (usually greater than 100.4° F [38° C]). Other symptoms include a headache; malaise; a dry, nonproductive cough; and dyspnea. The severity of the illness is highly variable, ranging from mild illness to pneumonia and, in some cases, progressing to respiratory failure and death.
Tracheobronchitis (acute).
Initially, tracheobronchitis produces a dry cough that later becomes productive as secretions increase. Chills, a sore throat, a slight fever, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness generally precede the cough's onset. Rhonchi and wheezes are usually heard. Severe illness causes a fever of 101° to 102° F (38.3° to 38.9° C) and possibly bronchospasm, with severe wheezing and increased coughing.
Tularemia.
Also known as rabbit fever, tularemia is caused by the gram-negative, non–spore-forming bacterium Francisella tularensis. It's typically a rural disease found in wild animals, water, and moist soil. It's transmitted to humans through the bite of an infected insect or tick, handling infected animal carcasses, drinking contaminated water, or inhaling the bacteria. It's considered a possible airborne agent for biological warfare. Signs and symptoms following inhalation of the organism include the abrupt onset of a fever, chills, a headache, generalized myalgia, a nonproductive cough, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and empyema.
Other causes
Diagnostic tests.
Pulmonary function tests (PFTs) and bronchoscopy may stimulate cough receptors and trigger coughing.
Treatments.
Irritation of the carina during suctioning or deep endotracheal or tracheal tube placement can trigger a paroxysmal or hacking cough. Intermittent positive-pressure breathing or spirometry can also cause a nonproductive cough. Some inhalants, such as pentamidine, may stimulate coughing.
Source: Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition), 2006
Common cold:
Causes and incidence
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
About 90% of colds stem from a viral infection of the upper respiratory passages and consequent mucous membrane inflammation; occasionally, colds result from a mycoplasmal infection. (See What happens in the common cold.)
Over a hundred viruses can cause the common cold. Major offenders include rhinoviruses, coronaviruses, myxoviruses, adenoviruses, coxsackieviruses, and echo-viruses.
Transmission occurs through airborne respiratory droplets, contact with contaminated objects, and hand-to-hand transmission. Children acquire new strains from their schoolmates and pass them on to family members. Fatigue or drafts don't increase susceptibility.
The common cold is more prevalent in children than in adults; in adolescent boys than in girls; and in women than in men. In temperate zones, it's more common in the colder months; in the tropics, during the rainy season.
Source: Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition), 2005
Cold injuries:
Causes and incidence
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
Localized cold injuries occur when ice crystals form in the tissues and expand extracellular spaces. With compression of the tissue cell, the cell membrane ruptures, interrupting enzymatic and metabolic activities. Increased capillary permeability accompanies histamine release, resulting in aggregation of red blood cells and microvascular occlusion. Hypothermia effects chemical changes that slow the functions of most major organ systems, such as decreased renal blood flow and decreased glomerular filtration. Frostbite results from prolonged exposure to dry temperatures far below freezing; hypothermia, from near drowning in cold water and prolonged exposure to cold temperatures.
The risk of serious cold injuries, especially hypothermia, is increased by youth, old age, lack of insulating body fat, wet or inadequate clothing, drug abuse, cardiac disease, smoking, fatigue, hunger and depletion of caloric reserves, and excessive alcohol intake (which draws blood into capillaries and away from body organs).
Source: Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition), 2005
Colorado tick fever is transmitted to humans by a hard-shelled wood tick called Dermacentor andersoni. The adult tick acquires the virus when it bites infected rodents and remains permanently infective.
Incidence is high in Colorado, where up to 15% of people who regularly camp show past exposure. It's much less common in the rest of the United States.
Source: Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition), 2005
A chronic infection in rodents, Lassa virus is transmitted to humans by contact with infected rodent urine, feces, and saliva. The virus enters the bloodstream, lymph vessels, and respiratory and digestive tracts. It then multiplies in the cells of the reticuloendothelial system. In the early stages of this illness, when the virus is in the throat, human transmission may occur through inhalation of infected droplets.
As many as 100 cases of Lassa fever occur annually in western Africa; the disease is rare in the United States.
Source: Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition), 2005
The body louse (Pediculus humanus corporis) carries louse-borne relapsing fever (B. recurrentis), which typically occurs in epidemics during wars, famines, and mass migrations. Cold weather and crowded living conditions also favor the spread of body lice.
Inoculation takes place when the victim crushes the louse, causing its infected blood or body fluid to soak into the victim's bitten or abraded skin or mucous membranes.
Louse-borne relapsing fever is most common in North and Central Africa, Europe, Asia, and South America. No cases of louse-borne relapsing fever have been reported in the United States since 1900.
Tick-borne relapsing fever, however, is found in the United States and is caused by at least 15 Borrelia species; the three species most commonly identified with tick carriers are B. hermsii (associated with Ornithodoros hermsi), B. turicatae (associated with O. turicata), and B. parkeri (associated with O. parkeri). This form of the disease is most prevalent in Texas and other western states, usually during the summer when ticks and their hosts (chipmunks, goats, squirrels, rabbits, mice, rats, owls, lizards, and prairie dogs) are most active. In the colder weather, outbreaks sometimes afflict people such as campers who sleep in tick-infested cabins.
Because tick bites are virtually painless and most Ornithodoros ticks feed at night but don’t imbed themselves in the victim’s skin, many people are bitten unknowingly.
Source: Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition), 2005
Rheumatic fever appears to be a hypersensitivity reaction to a group A beta-hemolytic streptococcal infection, in which antibodies manufactured to combat streptococci react and produce characteristic lesions at specific tissue sites, especially in the heart and joints. Because very few persons (3%) with streptococcal infections ever contract rheumatic fever, altered host resistance must be involved in its development or recurrence. Although rheumatic fever tends to be familial, this may merely reflect contributing environmental factors. For example, in lower socioeconomic groups, incidence is highest in children between ages 5 and 15, probably as a result of malnutrition and crowded living conditions. This disease strikes generally during cool, damp weather in the winter and early spring. In the United States, it’s most common in the northern states.
Source: Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition), 2005
R. rickettsii is transmitted to a human or small animal by the prolonged bite (4 to 6 hours) of an adult tick — the wood tick (Dermacentor andersoni) in the west and by the dog tick (Dermacentor variabilis) in the east. Occasionally, it's acquired through inhalation (it can occur in laboratory settings where aerosolization of blood and specimens may occur) or through the contact of abraded skin with tick excreta or tissue juices. (This explains why people should'nt crush ticks between their fingers when removing them from other people and animals.) In most tick-infested areas, 1% to 5% of the ticks harbor R. rickettsii.
Endemic throughout the continental United States, RMSF is particularly prevalent in the southeast and southwest. Because RMSF is associated with outdoor activities, such as camping and backpacking, the incidence of this illness is usually higher in the spring and summer. Epidemiologic surveillance reports for RMSF indicate that the incidence is also higher in children ages 5 to 9, men and boys, and whites.
Source: Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition), 2005
Whooping cough is usually transmitted by the direct inhalation of contaminated droplets from a patient in the acute stage; it may also be spread indirectly through soiled linen and other articles contaminated by respiratory secretions.
Whooping cough is endemic throughout the world, usually occurring in late winter and early spring. In about 50% of cases, it strikes unimmunized children younger than age 1, because the immunization series hasn’t been completed and the child has had contact with an adult harboring the organisms.
Source: Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition), 2005
Partial obstruction of the upper airway first produces sudden hoarseness, then a barking cough and inspiratory stridor. Other effects of this life-threatening condition include gagging, tachycardia, dyspnea, decreased breath sounds, wheezing, and possibly cyanosis.
This life-threatening disorder has become less common since the use of influenza vaccines. It occurs nocturnally, heralded by a barking cough and a high fever. The child is hoarse, dysphagic, dyspneic, and restless and appears extremely ill and panicky. The cough may progress to severe respiratory distress with sternal and intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, cyanosis, and tachycardia. The child will struggle to get sufficient air as epiglottic edema increases. Epiglottiditis is a true medical emergency.
Also known as viral croup, this infection is most common in children between ages 9 and 18 months and usually occurs in the fall and early winter. It initially produces low to moderate fever, runny nose, poor appetite, and infrequent cough. When the infection descends into the laryngotracheal area, a barking cough, hoarseness, and inspiratory stridor occur.
As respiratory distress progresses, substernal and intercostal retractions occur along with tachycardia and shallow, rapid respirations. Sleeping in a dry room worsens these signs. The patient becomes restless, irritable, pale, and cyanotic.
Acute spasmodic croup usually occurs during sleep with the abrupt onset of a barking cough that awakens the child. Typically, he doesn’t have a fever but may be hoarse, restless, and dyspneic. As his respiratory distress worsens, the child may exhibit sternal and intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, tachycardia, cyanosis, and an anxious, frantic appearance. The signs usually subside within a few hours, but attacks tend to recur.
Source: Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition), 2006
This disorder begins with a cough that produces purulent sputum. Fever, weight loss, fatigue, weakness, dyspnea, night sweats, pleuritic chest pain, and hemoptysis may also occur.
This disorder causes coughing that produces pink, frothy, possibly purulent sputum. The patient also has marked dyspnea, fever, tachypnea, tachycardia, wheezing, and cyanosis.
A severe asthma attack, which can be life-threatening, may produce tenacious mucoid sputum and mucus plugs. Such an attack typically starts with a dry cough and mild wheezing, then progresses to severe dyspnea, audible wheezing, chest tightness, and a productive cough. Other findings include apprehension, prolonged expiration, intercostal and supraclavicular retraction on inspiration, accessory muscle use, rhonchi, crackles, flaring nostrils, tachypnea, tachycardia, diaphoresis, and flushing or cyanosis. Attacks commonly occur at night or during sleep.
The chronic cough of this disorder produces copious mucopurulent sputum that has characteristic layering (top, frothy; middle, clear; bottom, dense with purulent particles). The patient has halitosis: His sputum may smell foul or sickeningly sweet. Other characteristic findings include hemoptysis, persistent coarse crackles over the affected lung area, occasional wheezing, rhonchi, exertional dyspnea, weight loss, fatigue, malaise, weakness, recurrent fever, and late-stage finger clubbing.
The cough associated with chronic bronchitis may be nonproductive initially; eventually, however, it produces mucoid sputum that becomes purulent. Secondary infection can also cause mucopurulent sputum, which may become blood tinged and foul smelling. The cough, which may be paroxysmal during exercise, usually occurs when the patient is recumbent or rises from sleep.
The patient also exhibits prolonged expiration, accessory muscle use, barrel chest, tachypnea, cyanosis, wheezing, exertional dyspnea, scattered rhonchi, coarse crackles (which can be precipitated by coughing), and late-stage clubbing.
This disorder causes a cough with purulent sputum. It may also cause dyspnea, wheezing, orthopnea, fever, malaise, crackles, laryngitis, rhinitis, and mucous membrane irritation of the conjunctivae, throat, and nose. Signs and symptoms may increase for 24 to 48 hours after exposure, then resolve; in severe pneumonitis, however, they may recur 2 to 5 weeks later.
The common cold may cause a productive cough with mucoid or mucopurulent sputum, but it usually starts with a dry, hacking cough, sore throat, sneezing, rhinorrhea, and nasal congestion. Headache, malaise, fatigue, myalgia, and arthralgia may also occur.
This disorder causes a chronic productive cough with scant mucoid, translucent, grayish white sputum that can become mucopurulent. Patients with emphysema are typically thin and have the characteristic pink or red complexion (“pink puffer” appearance). They may also exhibit increased accessory muscle use, tachypnea, grunting expirations through pursed lips, diminished breath sounds, exertional dyspnea, rhonchi, barrel chest, anorexia, and weight loss. Clubbing is a late sign.
This disorder causes a cough that produces scant mucoid, nonpurulent and, possibly, blood-streaked sputum. Prodromal signs and symptoms typically include malaise, fatigue, weakness, anorexia, diffuse myalgia, and possibly diarrhea. Within 12 to 48 hours, the patient develops a dry cough and a sudden high fever with chills. Many patients also have pleuritic chest pain, headache, tachypnea, tachycardia, nausea, vomiting, dyspnea, crackles, mild temporary amnesia, disorientation, confusion, flushing, mild diaphoresis, and prostration.
The cardinal sign of a ruptured lung abscess is a cough that produces copious amounts of purulent, foul-smelling and, possibly, blood-tinged sputum. A ruptured abscess can also cause diaphoresis, anorexia, clubbing, weight loss, weakness, fatigue, fever with chills, dyspnea, headache, malaise, pleuritic chest pain, halitosis, inspiratory crackles, and tubular or amphoric breath sounds. The patient’s chest is dull on percussion on the affected side.
One of the earliest signs of bronchogenic carcinoma is a chronic cough that produces small amounts of purulent (or mucopurulent), blood-streaked sputum. In a patient with bronchoalveolar cancer, however, coughing produces large amounts of frothy sputum. Other signs and symptoms of lung cancer include dyspnea, anorexia, fatigue, weight loss, chest pain, fever, diaphoresis, wheezing, and clubbing.
This disorder causes a productive cough (with purulent, thick, tenacious, and possibly blood-tinged sputum) and fever that may last several months. Other findings include night sweats, pleuritic pain, anorexia, weight loss, malaise, fatigue, and diminished or absent breath sounds. The patient’s chest is dull on percussion.
This chronic disorder may produce a dry hacking cough or a productive cough with bloody or purulent sputum. Other findings include pleuritic chest pain, fever, chills, anorexia, weight loss, malaise, fatigue, night sweats, cutaneous lesions (small, painless, nonpruritic macules or papules), and prostration.
Caused by Yersinia pestis, plague is one of the most virulent and, if untreated, most lethal bacterial infections known. Most cases are sporadic, but the potential for epidemic spread still exists. Clinical forms include bubonic (the most common), septicemic, and pneumonic plagues. The bubonic form is transmitted to man from the bite of infected fleas. Signs and symptoms include fever, chills, and swollen, inflamed, and tender lymph nodes near the site of the fleabite. Septicemic plague may develop as a complication of untreated bubonic or pneumonic plague and occurs when plague bacteria enter the bloodstream and multiply. The pneumonic form can be contracted by inhaling respiratory droplets from an infected person or inhaling the organism that has been dispersed in the air through biological warfare. The onset is usually sudden with chills, fever, headache, and myalgia. Pulmonary signs and symptoms include a productive cough, chest pain, tachypnea, dyspnea, hemoptysis, increasing respiratory distress, and cardiopulmonary insufficiency.
Bacterial pneumonia initially produces a dry cough that becomes productive. Associated signs and symptoms develop suddenly and include shaking chills, high fever, myalgia, headache, pleuritic chest pain that increases with chest movement, tachypnea, tachycardia, dyspnea, cyanosis, diaphoresis, decreased breath sounds, fine crackles, and rhonchi.
Mycoplasmal pneumonia may cause a cough that produces scant blood-flecked sputum. In most cases, however, a nonproductive cough starts 2 to 3 days after the onset of malaise, headache, fever, and sore throat. Paroxysmal coughing causes substernal chest pain. Patients may develop crackles but generally don’t appear seriously ill.
As this disorder progresses, the characteristic hacking cough, nonproductive at first, may later produce a small amount of mucoid, blood-streaked sputum. The infection may begin abruptly with chills, fever, headache, myalgia, and prostration. Other signs and symptoms include tachypnea, fine crackles, chest pain (rare), epistaxis, photophobia, abdominal distention and tenderness, nausea, vomiting, and a faint macular rash. Severe psittacosis may produce stupor, delirium, and coma.
This disorder causes a nonproductive or slightly productive cough with fever, occasional chills, pleuritic chest pain, sore throat, headache, backache, malaise, marked weakness, anorexia, hemoptysis, and an itchy macular rash. Rhonchi and wheezing may be heard. The disease may spread to other areas, causing arthralgia, swelling of the knees and ankles, and erythema nodosum or erythema multiforme.
When severe, this life-threatening disorder causes a cough that produces frothy, blood-tinged sputum. Early signs and symptoms include exertional dyspnea, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea followed by orthopnea, and a cough that may be nonproductive initially. Fever, fatigue, tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, and ventricular gallop may also occur. As the patient’s respirations become increasingly rapid and labored, he develops more diffuse crackles and the productive cough, worsening tachycardia, and possibly arrhythmias. His skin becomes cold, clammy, and cyanotic; his blood pressure falls; and his pulse becomes thready.
This life-threatening disorder causes a cough that may be nonproductive or may produce blood-tinged sputum. Usually, the first symptom of a pulmonary embolism is severe dyspnea, which may be accompanied by angina or pleuritic chest pain. The patient experiences marked anxiety, a low-grade fever, tachycardia, tachypnea, and diaphoresis. Less common signs include massive hemoptysis, chest splinting, leg edema and, in a large embolus, cyanosis, syncope, and distended jugular veins. The patient may also have a pleural friction rub, diffuse wheezing, crackles, chest dullness on percussion, decreased breath sounds, and signs of circulatory collapse.
This disorder causes a mild to severe productive cough along with some combination of hemoptysis, malaise, dyspnea, and pleuritic chest pain. Sputum may be scant and mucoid or copious and purulent. Typically, the patient experiences night sweats, easy fatigability, and weight loss. His breath sounds are amphoric. He may exhibit chest dullness on percussion and, after coughing, increased tactile fremitus with crackles.
A productive cough with mucopurulent sputum is the earliest sign of this disorder. The patient also has exertional dyspnea, tachypnea, weight loss, fatigue, general weakness, and recurrent respiratory infections. Auscultation reveals end-inspiratory, fine crackles at the lung bases.
Inflammation initially causes a nonproductive cough followed by chills, sore throat, slight fever, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness. As secretions increase, the cough produces mucoid, mucopurulent, or purulent sputum. The patient typically has rhonchi and wheezing; he may also develop crackles. Severe tracheobronchitis may cause a fever of 101° to 102° F (38.3° to 38.9° C) and bronchospasm.
Bronchoscopy and pulmonary function tests may increase productive coughing.
Expectorants, such as ammonium chloride, guaifenesin, potassium iodide, and terpin hydrate, increase productive coughing.
Intermittent positive-pressure breathing, nebulizer therapy, and incentive spirometry can help loosen secretions and cause or increase productive coughing.
Source: Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition), 2006
Signs and symptoms of hypopituitarism usually develop slowly and vary with the disorder’s severity. Cold intolerance and shivering typically accompany cold, dry, thin skin with a waxy pallor and fine wrinkles around the mouth. Other findings include fatigue, lethargy, menstrual disturbances, impotence, decreased libido, nervousness, irritability, headache, and hunger. If hypopituitarism results from a pituitary tumor, expect neurologic signs and symptoms, such as headache, bilateral temporal hemianopsia, loss of visual acuity, and possibly blindness.
A patient with hypothalamic damage may alternate from cold intolerance to heat intolerance. Cold intolerance develops suddenly; the patient typically complains of feeling chilled, shivering, and wearing extra clothes to keep warm. Related findings include amenorrhea, disturbed sleep pattern, increased thirst and urination, vigorous appetite with weight gain, impaired vision, headache, and personality changes, such as attacks of rage, laughing, and crying.
Cold intolerance develops early and worsens progressively in patients with this disorder. Other early findings include fatigue, anorexia with weight gain, constipation, and menorrhagia. As hypothyroidism progresses, the patient experiences loss of libido and slowed intellectual and motor activity. His hair becomes dry and sparse; nails, thick and brittle; and skin, dry, pale, cool, and doughy. Eventually, the patient displays a dull expression with periorbital and facial edema and puffy hands and feet. Relaxation is delayed after deep tendon reflex testing. Bradycardia, abdominal distention, and ataxia may also occur.
Source: Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition), 2006
Partial occlusion of the upper airway produces a sudden onset of dry, paroxysmal coughing. The patient exhibits gagging, wheezing, hoarseness, stridor, tachycardia, and decreased breath sounds.
This acute infectious disease is caused by the gram-positive, spore-forming bacterium Bacillus anthracis. Although the disease most commonly occurs in wild and domestic grazing animals, such as cattle, sheep, and goats, the spores can live in the soil for many years. The disease can occur in humans exposed to infected animals, tissue from infected animals, or biological agents. Most natural cases occur in agricultural regions worldwide. Anthrax may occur in cutaneous, inhalation, or GI forms.
Inhalation anthrax is caused by inhalation of aerosolized spores. Initial signs and symptoms are flulike and include fever, chills, weakness, cough, and chest pain. The disease generally occurs in two stages with a period of recovery after the initial signs and symptoms. The second stage develops abruptly and causes rapid deterioration marked by fever, dyspnea, stridor, and hypotension; death generally results within 24 hours. Radiologic findings include mediastinitis and symmetrical mediastinal widening.
This disorder causes a brassy cough with dyspnea, hoarseness, wheezing, and a substernal ache in the shoulders, lower back, or abdomen. The patient may also have facial or neck edema, jugular vein distention, dysphagia, prominent veins over his chest, stridor, and possibly paresthesia or neuralgia.
Asthma attacks commonly occur at night, starting with a nonproductive cough and mild wheezing and progressing to severe dyspnea, audible wheezing, chest tightness, and a cough that produces thick mucus. Other signs include apprehension, rhonchi, prolonged expirations, intercostal and supraclavicular retractions on inspiration, accessory muscle use, flaring nostrils, tachypnea, tachycardia, diaphoresis, and flushing or cyanosis.
As lung tissue deflates in atelectasis, it stimulates cough receptors, causing a nonproductive cough. The patient may also have pleuritic chest pain, anxiety, dyspnea, tachypnea, tachycardia, decreased breath sounds, cyanotic skin, and diaphoresis. His chest may be dull on percussion, and he may exhibit inspiratory lag, substernal or intercostal retractions, decreased vocal fremitus, and tracheal deviation toward the affected side.
These potentially life-threatening viruses are spread to humans through infected poultry and surfaces contaminated with infected bird excretions. Infected individuals may initially have symptoms of conventional influenza, including a nonproductive cough, fever, sore throat, and muscle aches. The most virulent avian virus, influenza A (H5N1), may lead to severe and life-threatening complications, such as acute respiratory distress and pneumonia. To date this strain of the virus has not surfaced in the United States; however, a recent outbreak in Asian and European countries has caused worldwide concern that the virus may spread through both infected humans and birds. Treatment with two of the four FDA-approved antiviral medications has proven effective with some virus strains, and an experimental vaccine is currently under investigation.
This disorder starts with a nonproductive, hacking cough that later becomes productive. Other findings include prolonged expiration, wheezing, dyspnea, accessory muscle use, barrel chest, cyanosis, tachypnea, crackles, and scattered rhonchi. Clubbing can occur in late stages.
The earliest indicators of this disease can be a chronic nonproductive cough, dyspnea, and vague chest pain. The patient may also be wheezing.
Most colds start with a nonproductive, hacking cough and progress to some mix of sneezing, rhinorrhea, nasal congestion, sore throat, headache, malaise, fatigue, myalgia, and arthralgia.
In this disorder, regurgitation and aspiration produce a dry cough and, possibly, recurrent pulmonary infections and dysphagia.
The patient with this disorder has a nocturnal nonproductive cough, regurgitation and aspiration, dyspepsia, and dysphagia. His neck may appear swollen and have a gurgling sound. He may also exhibit halitosis and weight loss.
This disorder is marked by sudden nonproductive coughing and gagging with a sensation of something stuck in the throat. Other findings include neck or chest pain and dysphagia.
This disorder commonly causes a nonproductive nocturnal cough due to regurgitation and aspiration. The patient may also experience chest pain that mimics angina pectoris, heartburn that worsens if he lies down after eating, increased salivation, dysphagia, hematemesis, and melena.
Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome A nonproductive cough is common in patients with this disorder, which is marked by noncardiogenic pulmonary edema. Other findings include headache, myalgia, fever, nausea, and vomiting.
This disease may cause a crowing nonproductive cough. However, the earliest sign is usually painless swelling of one of the cervical lymph nodes or, occasionally, of the axillary, mediastinal, or inguinal lymph nodes. Another early sign is pruritus. Other findings depend on the degree and location of systemic involvement and include dyspnea, dysphagia, hepatosplenomegaly, edema, jaundice, nerve pain, and hyperpigmentation.
In this disorder, an acute nonproductive cough, fever, dyspnea, and malaise usually occur 5 to 6 hours after exposure to an antigen.
A patient with this disorder has a nonproductive cough and progressive dyspnea. He may also be cyanotic and have clubbing, fine crackles, fatigue, variable chest pain, and weight loss.
A mild nonproductive cough, minor throat discomfort, and hoarseness are early signs of this disorder. Later, dysphagia, dyspnea, cervical lymphadenopathy, stridor, and earache may occur.
Acute laryngitis causes a nonproductive cough with localized pain (especially when the patient swallows or speaks) as well as fever and malaise. His hoarseness can range from mild to complete loss of voice.
After a prodrome of malaise, headache and, possibly, diarrhea, anorexia, diffuse myalgia, and general weakness, legionnaires’disease causes a nonproductive cough that later produces mucoid, nonpurulent and, possibly, blood-tinged sputum.
This disorder typically begins with a nonproductive cough, weakness, dyspnea, and pleuritic chest pain. The patient may also exhibit diaphoresis, fever, headache, malaise, fatigue, crackles, decreased breath sounds, anorexia, and weight loss. Later, his cough produces large amounts of purulent, foul-smelling and, possibly, blood-tinged sputum.
A large mediastinal tumor produces a nonproductive cough, dyspnea, and retrosternal pain. The patient may also develop stertorous respirations with suprasternal retraction on inspiration, hoarseness, dysphagia, tracheal shift or tug, jugular vein distention, and facial or neck edema.
The most common signs and symptoms of this disorder are dysphagia, fever, pleuritic chest pain, and pericardial friction rub. A severe nonproductive cough occurs rarely.
A nonproductive cough, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and decreased chest motion are characteristic of pleural effusion. Other findings include pleural friction rub, tachycardia, tachypnea, egophony, flatness on percussion, decreased or absent breath sounds, and decreased tactile fremitus.
Bacterial pneumonia usually starts with a nonproductive, hacking, painful cough that rapidly becomes productive. Other findings include shaking chills, headache, high fever, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, tachypnea, tachycardia, grunting respirations, nasal flaring, decreased breath sounds, fine crackles, rhonchi, and cyanosis. The patient’s chest may be dull on percussion.
In mycoplasmal pneumonia, a nonproductive cough develops 2 to 3 days after the onset of malaise, headache, and sore throat. The cough may be paroxysmal, causing substernal chest pain. The patient commonly has a fever but doesn’t appear seriously ill.
Viral pneumonia causes a nonproductive, hacking cough and the gradual onset of malaise, headache, anorexia, and low-grade fever.
This life-threatening disorder causes a dry cough and signs of respiratory distress, such as severe dyspnea, tachycardia, tachypnea, and cyanosis. The patient experiences sudden, sharp chest pain that worsens with chest movement as well as subcutaneous crepitation, hyperresonance or tympany, decreased vocal fremitus, and decreased or absent breath sounds on the affected side.
In this disorder, an initially dry, hacking cough later produces small amounts of blood-streaked, mucoid sputum. Psittacosis may begin abruptly with chills, fever, headache, myalgia, and prostration. The patient may also have tachypnea, fine crackles, epistaxis and, rarely, chest pain.
This disorder initially causes a dry cough, exertional dyspnea, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, orthopnea, tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, and ventricular gallop. If pulmonary edema is severe, the patient’s respirations become more rapid and labored, with diffuse crackles and a cough that produces frothy, blood-streaked sputum.
A life-threatening pulmonary embolism may suddenly produce a dry cough, dyspnea, and pleuritic or anginal chest pain. In most cases, though, the cough produces blood-tinged sputum. Tachycardia and low-grade fever are also common; less common signs and symptoms include massive hemoptysis, chest splinting, leg edema and, with a large embolus, cyanosis, syncope, and distended jugular veins. The patient may also have a pleural friction rub, diffuse wheezing, dullness on percussion, and decreased breath sounds.
In this disorder, a nonproductive cough is accompanied by dyspnea, substernal pain, and malaise. The patient may also develop fatigue, arthralgia, myalgia, weight loss, tachypnea, crackles, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, skin lesions, vision impairment, difficulty swallowing, and arrhythmias.
SARS is an acute infectious disease of unknown etiology; however, a novel coronavirus has been implicated as a possible cause. Although most cases have been reported in Asia (China, Vietnam, Singapore, Thailand), cases have cropped up in Europe and North America. The incubation period is 2 to 7 days, and the illness generally begins with a fever (usually greater than 100.4° F [38° C]). Other symptoms include headache, malaise, a nonproductive cough, and dyspnea. The severity of the illness is highly variable, ranging from mild illness to pneumonia and, in some cases, progressing to respiratory failure and death.
This disorder can cause a chronic nonproductive cough due to postnasal drip. The patient’s nasal mucosa may appear inflamed, and he may have nasal congestion and profuse drainage. Usually, his breath smells musty.
Initially, this disorder produces a dry cough that later becomes productive as secretions increase. Chills, sore throat, slight fever, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness generally precede the cough’s onset. Rhonchi and wheezing are usually heard. Severe illness causes a fever of 101° to 102° F (38.3° to 38.9° C) and possibly bronchospasm, severe wheezing, and increased coughing.
Also known as “rabbit fever,” this infectious disease is caused by the gram-negative, non–spore-forming bacterium Francisella tularensis. This organism is found in wild animals, water, and moist soil, typically in rural areas. It’s transmitted to humans through the bite of an infected insect or tick, the handling of infected animal carcasses, the drinking of contaminated water, or the inhalation of the bacterium. It’s considered a possible airborne agent for biological warfare. Signs and symptoms following inhalation of the organism include the abrupt onset of fever, chills, headache, generalized myalgia, a nonproductive cough, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and empyema.
Pulmonary function tests and bronchoscopy may stimulate cough receptors and trigger coughing.
Certain drugs, such as angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, may also cause a nonproductive cough.
Irritation of the carina during suctioning or deep endotracheal or tracheal tube placement can trigger a paroxysmal or hacking cough. Intermittent positive-pressure breathing or spirometry can also cause a nonproductive cough. Some inhalants, such as pentamidine, may stimulate coughing.
Source: Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition), 2006
Severe earache accompanied by a persistent ipsilateral headache, malaise, and recurrent mild fever characterizes this serious complication of middle ear infection.
Earache associated with barotrauma ranges from mild pressure to severe pain. Tympanic membrane ecchymosis or bleeding into the tympanic cavity may occur, producing a blue drumhead; the eardrum usually isn’t perforated.
Impacted cerumen (earwax) may cause a sensation of blockage or fullness in the ear. Additional features include partial hearing loss, itching and, possibly, dizziness.
Chondrodermatitis nodularis chronica produces small, painful, indurated areas along the auricle’s upper rim.
An insect lodged in the ear canal may cause severe pain and distressing noise.
Prolonged exposure to cold may cause burning or tingling pain in the ear, followed by numbness. The ear appears mottled and gray or white; it turns purplish blue as it’s warmed.
Infected hair follicles in the outer ear canal may produce severe, localized ear pain associated with a pus-filled furuncle (boil). The pain is aggravated by jaw movement and relieved by rupture or incision of the furuncle. Pinna tenderness, swelling of the auditory meatus, partial hearing loss, and a feeling of fullness in the ear canal may also occur.
Herpes zoster oticus causes burning or stabbing ear pain that’s commonly associated with ear vesicles. The patient also complains of hearing loss and vertigo. Associated signs and symptoms include transient ipsilateral facial paralysis, partial loss of taste, tongue vesicles, and nausea and vomiting.
Mild ear pain, otorrhea, and tinnitus are common in keratosis obturans. Inspection reveals a white glistening plug obstructing the external meatus.
Mastoiditis causes a dull ache behind the ear accompanied by low-grade fever (99° F to 100° F [37.2° C to 37.8° C]). The eardrum appears dull and edematous and may perforate, and soft tissue near the eardrum may sag. A purulent discharge is seen in the external canal.
Ménière’s disease is an inner ear disorder that can produce a sensation of fullness in the affected ear. Its classic effects, however, include severe vertigo, tinnitus, and sensorineural hearing loss. The patient may also experience nausea and vomiting, diaphoresis, and nystagmus.
Deep, boring ear pain and facial paralysis are late signs of a malignant tumor.
Myringitis bullosa is a rare bacterial infection that causes sudden, severe ear pain that radiates over the mastoid and lasts for up to 48 hours. Small serous or blood-filled vesicles may dot the reddened tympanic membrane. Transient hearing loss and a serosanguineous discharge may also occur.
Earache characterizes both acute and malignant otitis externa. Acute otitis externa begins with mild to moderate ear pain that occurs with tragus manipulation. The pain may be accompanied by low-grade fever, sticky yellow or purulent ear discharge, partial hearing loss, and a feeling of blockage. Later, ear pain intensifies, causing the entire side of the head to ache and throb. Fever may reach 104° F (40° C). Examination reveals swelling of the tragus, external meatus, and external canal; eardrum erythema; and lymphadenopathy. The patient also complains of dizziness and malaise.
Malignant otitis externa causes sudden ear pain that’s aggravated by moving the auricle or tragus. The pain is accompanied by intense itching, purulent ear discharge, fever, parotid gland swelling, and trismus. Examination reveals a swollen external canal with exposed cartilage and temporal bone. Cranial nerve palsy may occur.
Otitis media is a middle ear inflammation that can be serous or suppurative. Acute serous otitis media may cause a feeling of fullness in the ear, hearing loss, and a vague sensation of top-heaviness. The eardrum may be slightly retracted, amber colored, and marked by air bubbles and a meniscus, or it may be blue-black from hemorrhage.
Acute suppurative otitis media is characterized by severe deep, throbbing ear pain; hearing loss; and fever that may reach 102° F (38.9° C).The pain increases steadily over several hours or days and may be aggravated by pressure on the mastoid antrum. Perforation of the eardrum is possible. Before rupture, the eardrum appears bulging and fiery red. Rupture causes purulent drainage and relieves the pain.
Chronic otitis media usually isn’t painful except during exacerbations. Persistent pain and discharge from the ear suggest cancer or osteomyelitis of the skull base.
Perichondritis can cause ear pain accompanied by warmth and tenderness in the outer ear and a reddened, doughlike auricle.
The result of acute otitis media, this infection produces deep ear pain with headache and pain behind the eye. Other findings are diplopia, loss of lateral gaze, vomiting, sensorineural hearing loss, vertigo and, possibly, nuchal rigidity.
Typically unilateral, temporomandibular joint infection produces ear pain that’s referred from the jaw joint. The pain is aggravated by pressure on the joint with jaw movement; it commonly radiates to the temporal area or the entire side of the head.
Source: Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition), 2006
In this disorder, the patient may experience a fever along with lymphadenopathy, malaise, and headache. After the bacterium Bacillus anthracis enters a cut or abrasion on the skin, the infection begins as a small, painless or pruritic macular or papular lesion resembling an insect bite. Within 1 to 2 days, the lesion develops into a vesicle and then into a painless ulcer with a characteristic black necrotic center.
After ingesting contaminated meat from an animal infected with the bacterium Bacillus anthracis, the patient experiences fever, anorexia, nausea, vomiting and, possibly, abdominal pain, severe bloody diarrhea, and hematemesis.
This acute infectious disease initially produces flulike signs and symptoms, including fever, chills, weakness, cough, and chest pain. The disease generally occurs in two stages with a period of recovery after the initial symptoms. The second stage develops abruptly and causes rapid deterioration marked by fever, dyspnea, stridor, and hypotension; death generally results within 24 hours.
Avian influenza, also known as bird flu, is an infection caused by viruses that originate in the intestines of wild birds but are highly contagious to domesticated birds, such as chickens, turkeys, and geese. Infected poultry and surfaces contaminated with infected bird excretions have recently led to human infections and deaths in several Asian countries. Fever is commonly an initial symptom of these viruses along with other conventional influenza symptoms, such as muscle aches, sore throat, and cough. Individuals infected with the most virulent avian virus, influenza A (H5N1), may develop pneumonia, acute respiratory distress, and other life-threatening complications.
Fever, bloody diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, and abdominal cramps occur after eating undercooked beef or other foods contaminated with this strain of bacteria. Children younger than age 5 and elderly patients may develop hemolytic uremic syndrome, which can ultimately lead to acute renal failure.
When present, fever usually remains low, although moderate elevations may accompany erythema multiforme. Fever may be remittent or intermittent, as in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) or systemic lupus erythematosus, or sustained, as in polyarteritis. As one of several vague, prodromal complaints (such as fatigue, anorexia, and weight loss), fever produces nocturnal diaphoresis and accompanies such associated signs and symptoms as diarrhea and a persistent cough (in AIDS) or morning stiffness (in rheumatoid arthritis). Other disease-specific findings include headache and vision loss (in temporal arteritis); pain and stiffness in the neck, shoulders, back, or pelvis (in ankylosing spondylitis and polymyalgia rheumatica); skin and mucous membrane lesions (in erythema multiforme); and urethritis with urethral discharge and conjunctivitis (in Reiter’s syndrome).
Fever ranges from low (in Crohn’s disease or ulcerative colitis) to extremely high (in those with bacterial pneumonia, necrotizing fasciitis, Ebola virus or Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome). It may be remittent, as in infectious mononucleosis or otitis media; hectic (recurring daily with sweating, chills, and flushing), as in a lung abscess, influenza, or endocarditis; sustained, as in meningitis; or relapsing, as in malaria. Fever may arise abruptly, as in toxic shock syndrome or Rocky Mountain spotted fever, or insidiously, as in mycoplasmal pneumonia. In patients with hepatitis, fever may represent a disease prodrome; in those with appendicitis, it follows the acute stage. Its sudden late appearance with tachycardia, tachypnea, and confusion heralds life-threatening septic shock in patients with peritonitis or gram-negative bacteremia.
Associated signs and symptoms involve every system. The cyclic variations of hectic fever typically produce alternating chills and diaphoresis. General systemic complaints include weakness, anorexia, and malaise.
Fever, typically high and spiking, is the primary characteristic of this acute illness. The diagnosis of Kawasaki syndrome is confirmed when fever persists for 5 or more days (or until administration of I.V. gamma globulin if given before the fifth day) and is accompanied by other clinical signs, including conjunctival injection, erythema, lymphadenopathy, and peripheral extremity swelling. This syndrome occurs worldwide, with the highest incidence in Japan. It primarily affects children under age 5, is more prevalent in boys, and can cause serious heart damage and death without prompt treatment with I.V. gamma globulin.
Signs and symptoms of this infection include fever, myalgia, abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. If the infection spreads to the nervous system, it may cause meningitis, whose symptoms include fever, headache, nuchal rigidity, and change in LOC.
Gender Cue: Listeriosis during pregnancy may lead to premature delivery, infection of the neonate, or stillbirth.
Fever is one of the initial symptoms that occurs in almost all patients infected with this rare viral disease. A papular rash that may be localized or generalized appears within 1 to 3 days after the fever begins. Additional symptoms commonly include sore throat, chills, and lymphadenopathy. There is no treatment for monkeypox, but the disease is rarely fatal in developed countries and usually lasts 2 to 4 weeks.
Primary neoplasms and metastases can produce prolonged fever of varying elevations. For instance, acute leukemia may manifest insidiously with a low fever, pallor, and bleeding tendencies, or more abruptly with a high fever, frank bleeding, and prostration. Occasionally, Hodgkin’s disease produces undulant fever or Pel-Ebstein fever, an irregularly relapsing fever.
Besides fever and nocturnal diaphoresis, neoplastic disease commonly causes anorexia, fatigue, malaise, and weight loss. Examination may reveal lesions, lymphadenopathy, palpable masses, and hepatosplenomegaly.
Caused by Yersinia pestis, plague is one of the most virulent bacterial infections known. The bubonic form of plague is transmitted to man from the bite of infected fleas and causes fever, chills, and swollen, inflamed, and tender lymph nodes near the site of the bite. Septicemic plague may deveop as a complication of untreated bubonic or pneumonic plague, and occurs when bacteria enter the bloodstream and multiply. Pneumonic plague manifests as a sudden onset of chills, fever, headache, and myalgia after person-to-person transmission by respiratory droplets. Other signs and symptoms of the pneumonic form include a productive cough, chest pain, tachypnea, dyspnea, hemoptysis, increasing respiratory distress, and cardiopulmonary insufficiency.
This rickettsial disease caused by Coxiella burnetii causes fever (which may last up to 2 weeks), chills, severe headache, malaise, chest pain, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. In severe cases, the patient may develop hepatitis or pneumonia.
Fever is one of the initial symptoms of this common illness that affects most children by age 2. Healthy adults and children older than age 3 usually develop a low-grade fever along with other common coldlike symptoms of runny nose, cough, and wheezing. Many children less than age 3 have a high-grade fever that may be accompanied by a severe cough, rapid breathing, and high-pitched expiratory wheezing. Infants with RSV typically exhibit lethargy, poor eating, irritability, and difficulty breathing; severe cases may require hospitalization. To avoid repeated RSV infection, individuals should practice infection-control techniques, such as proper hand-washing and avoiding contact with contaminated surfaces.
This disorder results in muscle breakdown and release of the muscle cell contents (myoglobin) into the bloodstream. Signs and symptoms include fever, muscle weakness or pain, nausea, vomiting, malaise, and dark urine. Acute renal failure, the most common complication rhabdomyolysis, results from renal structure obstruction and injury during the kidneys’attempt to filter the myoglobin from the bloodstream.
Typical signs and symptoms of this infection include fever, myalgia, weakness, dizziness, and back pain. A small percentage of patients may develop encephalitis or may progress to hemorrhagic fever that can lead to shock and hemorrhage. Inflammation of the retina may result in some permanent vision loss.
SARS is an acute infectious disease of unknown etiology; however, a novel coronavirus has been implicated as a possible cause. Although most cases have been reported in Asia (China, Vietnam, Singapore, Thailand), cases have cropped up in Europe and North America. After an incubation period of 2 to 7 days, the illness generally begins with a fever (usually greater than 100.4° F [38° C]). Other symptoms include headache, malaise, a nonproductive cough, and dyspnea. SARS may produce only mild symptoms, or it may progress to pneumonia and, in some cases, even respiratory failure and death.
i> Initial signs and symptoms of this virus include high fever, malaise, prostration, severe headache, backache, and abdominal pain. A maculopapular rash develops on the mucosa of the mouth, pharynx, face, and forearms and then spreads to the trunk and legs. Within 2 days, the rash becomes vesicular and later pustular. The lesions develop at the same time, appear identical, and are more prominent on the face and extremities. The pustules are round, firm, and deeply embedded in the skin. After 8 or 9 days, they form a crust, which later separates from the skin, leaving a pitted scar. Death may result from encephalitis, extensive bleeding, or secondary infection.
Sudden onset of fever that rises rapidly and remains as high as 107° F (41.7° C) occurs in life-threatening disorders, such as heatstroke, thyroid storm, neuroleptic malignant syndrome, and malignant hyperthermia, and in lesions of the central nervous system (CNS). A low or moderate fever occurs in dehydrated patients.
Prolonged high fever commonly produces vomiting, anhidrosis, decreased level of consciousness (LOC), and hot, flushed skin. Related cardiovascular effects may include tachycardia, tachypnea, and hypotension. Other disease-specific findings include skin changes (dry skin and mucous membranes, poor skin turgor) and oliguria in dehydration; mottled cyanosis in malignant hyperthermia; diarrhea in thyroid storm; and ominous signs of increased intracranial pressure (decreased LOC with bradycardia, widened pulse pressure, and increased systolic pressure) in CNS tumor, trauma, or hemorrhage.
This infectious disease, also known as “rabbit fever,” causes abrupt onset of fever, chills, headache, generalized myalgia, nonproductive cough, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and empyema.
In this rickettsial disease, the patient initially experiences headache, myalgia, arthralgia, and malaise. These symptoms are followed by an abrupt onset of fever, chills, nausea, vomiting, and—in some cases—a maculopapular rash.
This brain infection is caused by West Nile virus, a mosquito-borne flavivirus commonly found in Africa, West Asia, and the Middle East and rarely in North America. Most patients have mild signs and symptoms, including fever, headache, body aches, rash, and swollen lymph glands. More severe infection is marked by high fever, headache, neck stiffness, stupor, disorientation, coma, tremors and, occasionally, paralysis or seizures. Death rarely occurs.
Immediate or delayed fever infrequently follows radiographic tests that use a contrast medium.
Fever and rash commonly result from hypersensitivity to antifungals, sulfonamides, penicillins, cephalosporins, tetracyclines, barbiturates, phenytoin, quinidine, iodides, methyldopa, procainamide, and some antitoxins. Fever can accompany chemotherapy, especially with bleomycin, vincristine, and asparaginase. It can result from drugs that impair sweating, such as anticholinergics, phenothiazines, and monoamine oxidase inhibitors. A drug-induced fever typically disappears after the drug is discontinued. Fever can also stem from toxic doses of salicylates, amphetamines, and tricyclic antidepressants.
Inhaled anesthetics and muscle relaxants can trigger malignant hyperthermia in patients with this inherited trait.
A remittent or intermittent low fever may occur for several days after surgery. Transfusion reactions characteristically produce an abrupt onset of fever and chills.
Source: Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition), 2006
❑ Rhinovirus
❑ Group A streptococci
❑ Ebstein-Barr virus
❑ Adenovirus
❑ Influenza
❑ Candida/thrush
❑ Herpes simplex virus
❑ Peritonsillar abscess
❑ Mycoplasma pneumoniae
❑ Coxsackievirus
❑ Primary HIV
❑ Neisseria gonorrhea
❑ Epiglottitis
❑ Corynebacterium diphtheriae
❑ Leukemia
Source: Field Guide to Bedside Diagnosis, 2007
Infection
❑ HIV
❑ Tuberculosis
❑ Endocarditis
❑ Osteomyelitis
❑ Malaria
❑ Syphilis
❑ Zoonosis
❑ Typhoid fever
❑ Chronic meningococcemia
Neoplasm
❑ Lymphoma
❑ Liver metastases
❑ Renal cell carcinoma
❑ Atrial myxoma
Collagen-Vascular Disease
❑ Giant cell arteritis
❑ Systemic lupus erythematosus
❑ Vasculitis
❑ Rheumatic fever
❑ Still disease
Other
❑ Drugs
❑ Heat stroke
❑ Factitious
❑ Malignant hyperthermia
❑ Multiple pulmonary emboli
Source: Field Guide to Bedside Diagnosis, 2007
❑ Viral upper respiratory infection
❑ Asthma
❑ Sinusitis
❑ Mycoplasma bronchitis
❑ Pneumonia
❑ Gastroesophageal reflux
❑ Congestive heart failure
❑ ACE inhibitor
❑ Aspiration
❑ Cough in HIV
❑ Thermal
❑ Fume inhalation
❑ Pertussis
❑ Lung abscess
Source: Field Guide to Bedside Diagnosis, 2007
❑ Upper respiratory infection
❑ Allergy
❑ Asthma
❑ Chronic bronchitis
❑ Chronic sinusitis
❑ Gastroesophageal reflux
❑ ACE inhibitor
❑ Pollutants
❑ Psychogenic
❑ Foreign body
❑ Congestive heart failure
❑ Lung cancer
❑ Tuberculosis
❑ Mediastinal mass
❑ Bronchiectasis
❑ Pulmonary fibrosis
❑ Cystic fibrosis
❑ Aspergillosis
Source: Field Guide to Bedside Diagnosis, 2007
The common cold is more prevalent in children than in adults, in adolescent boys than in girls, and in women than in men. In temperate zones, it occurs more commonly during the colder months; in the tropics, during the rainy season.
About 90% of colds stem from a viral infection of the upper respiratory passages and consequent mucous membrane inflammation; occasionally, colds result from Mycoplasma. More than a hundred viruses can cause the common cold. Major offenders include rhinoviruses, coronaviruses, myxoviruses, adenoviruses, coxsackieviruses, and echoviruses.
Transmission occurs through airborne respiratory droplets, contact with contaminated objects, and hand-to-hand transmission. Children acquire new strains from their schoolmates and pass them on to family members. Fatigue or drafts don’t increase susceptibility.
Source: Handbook of Diseases, 2003
The specific causes of frostbite and hypothermia vary.
Localized cold injuries occur when ice crystals form in the tissues and expand extracellular spaces. With compression of the tissue cell, the cell membrane ruptures, interrupting enzymatic and metabolic activities. Increased capillary permeability accompanies the release of histamine, resulting in aggregation of red blood cells and microvascular occlusion. Frostbite results from prolonged exposure to dry temperatures far below freezing.
Chemical changes result from hypothermia that slow the functions of most major organ systems, such as decreased renal blood flow and decreased glomerular filtration. Hypothermia results from cold-water near-drowning and prolonged exposure to cold temperatures.
Source: Handbook of Diseases, 2003
Rheumatic fever appears to be a hypersensitivity reaction to a group A beta-hemolytic streptococcal infection, in which antibodies manufactured to combat streptococci react and produce characteristic lesions at specific tissue sites, especially in the heart and joints. About 3% of patients with untreated streptococcal infections develop rheumatic fever.
Although rheumatic fever tends to run in families, this may merely reflect contributing environmental factors. It primarily affects children between ages 6 and 15, usually within 1 to 5 weeks after strep throat or scarlet fever. The disease strikes most often during cool, damp weather in winter and early spring. In the United States, it’s most common in the northern states.
Source: Handbook of Diseases, 2003
Partial obstruction of the upper airway first produces sudden hoarseness, and then a barking cough and inspiratory stridor. Other effects of this life-threatening condition include gagging, tachycardia, dyspnea, decreased breath sounds, wheezing and, possibly, cyanosis.
As respiratory distress progresses, substernal and intercostal retractions occur along with tachycardia and shallow, rapid respirations. Sleeping in a dry room worsens these signs. The patient becomes restless, irritable, pale, and cyanotic.
Source: Alarming Signs and Symptoms: Lippincott Manual of Nursing Practice Series, 2007
Actinomycosis begins with a cough that produces purulent sputum. Fever, weight loss, fatigue, weakness, dyspnea, night sweats, pleuritic chest pain, and hemoptysis may also occur.
Aspiration pneumonitis causes coughing that produces pink, frothy, and possibly purulent sputum. The patient also has marked dyspnea, fever, tachypnea, tachycardia, wheezing, and cyanosis.
A severe asthma attack, which can be life-threatening, may produce mucoid, tenacious sputum and mucus plugs. Such an attack typically starts with a dry cough and mild wheezing, and then progresses to severe dyspnea, audible wheezing, chest tightness, and a productive cough. Other findings include apprehension, prolonged expirations, intercostal and supraclavicular retraction on inspiration, accessory muscle use, rhonchi, crackles, flaring nostrils, tachypnea, tachycardia, diaphoresis, and flushing or cyanosis. Attacks commonly occur at night or during sleep.
The chronic cough of bronchiectasis produces copious, mucopurulent sputum that has characteristic layering (top, frothy; middle, clear; bottom, dense with purulent particles). The patient has halitosis; his sputum may smell foul or sickeningly sweet. Other characteristic findings include hemoptysis, persistent coarse crackles over the affected lung area, occasional wheezing, rhonchi, exertional dyspnea, weight loss, fatigue, malaise, weakness, recurrent fever, and late-stage finger clubbing.
Bronchitis causes a cough that may be nonproductive initially. Eventually, however, it produces mucoid sputum that becomes purulent. Secondary infection can also cause mucopurulent sputum, which may become blood-tinged and foul-smelling. The coughing, which may be paroxysmal during exercise, usually occurs when the patient is recumbent or rises from sleep.
The patient also exhibits prolonged expirations, increased use of accessory muscles for breathing, barrel chest, tachypnea, cyanosis, wheezing, exertional dyspnea, scattered rhonchi, coarse crackles (which can be precipitated by coughing), and late-stage clubbing.
Chemical pneumonitis causes a cough with purulent sputum. It can also cause dyspnea, wheezing, orthopnea, fever, malaise, and crackles; mucous membrane irritation of the conjunctivae, throat, and nose; laryngitis; or rhinitis. Signs and symptoms may increase for 24 to 48 hours after exposure, and then resolve; if severe, however, they may recur 2 to 5 weeks later.
Mycoplasma pneumonia may cause a cough that produces scant blood-flecked sputum. Most common, however, is a nonproductive cough that starts 2 to 3 days after the onset of malaise, headache, fever, and sore throat. Paroxysmal coughing causes substernal chest pain. Patients may develop crackles but generally don’t appear seriously ill.
Source: Alarming Signs and Symptoms: Lippincott Manual of Nursing Practice Series, 2007
The initial signs and symptoms of inhalation anthrax are flulike ones, including fever, chills, weakness, cough, and chest pain. The disease generally occurs in two stages with a period of recovery after the initial symptoms. The second stage develops abruptly with rapid deterioration marked by fever, dyspnea, stridor, and hypotension, generally leading to death within 24 hours.
Associated signs and symptoms involve every system. The cyclic variations of hectic fever typically produce alternating chills and diaphoresis. General systemic complaints include weakness, anorexia, and malaise.
Primary neoplasms and metastasis can produce prolonged fever of varying elevations. For instance, acute leukemia may present insidiously with low fever, pallor, and bleeding tendencies, or more abruptly with high fever, frank bleeding, and prostration. Occasionally, Hodgkin’s disease produces undulant fever or Pel-Ebstein fever, an irregularly relapsing fever.
Besides fever and nocturnal diaphoresis, neoplastic disease often causes anorexia, fatigue, malaise, and weight loss. Examination may reveal lesions, lymphadenopathy, palpable masses, and hepatosplenomegaly.
Rhabdomyolysis results in muscle breakdown and release of the muscle cell contents (myoglobin) into the bloodstream, with signs and symptoms including fever, muscle weakness or pain, nausea, vomiting, malaise, or dark urine. Acute renal failure is the most frequently reported complication of the disorder. It results from renal structure obstruction and injury during the kidney’s attempt to filter the myoglobin from the bloodstream.
Typical signs and symptoms of Rift Valley fever include fever, myalgia, weakness, dizziness, and back pain. A small percentage of patients may develop encephalitis or may progress to hemorrhagic fever that can lead to shock and hemorrhage. Inflammation of the retina may result in some permanent vision loss.
Prolonged high fever commonly produces vomiting, anhidrosis, decreased level of consciousness (LOC), and hot, flushed skin. Related cardiovascular effects may include tachycardia, tachypnea, and hypotension. Other disease-specific findings include skin changes: dry skin and mucous membranes, poor skin turgor, and oliguria with dehydration; mottled cyanosis with malignant hyperthermia; diarrhea with thyroid storm; and ominous signs of increased intracranial pressure (decreased LOC with bradycardia, widened pulse pressure, and increased systolic pressure) with CNS tumor, trauma, or hemorrhage.
Fever and rash commonly result from hypersensitivity to antifungals, sulfonamides, penicillins, cephalosporins, tetracyclines, barbiturates, phenytoin, quinidine, iodides, phenolphthalein, methyldopa, procainamide, and some antitoxins. Fever can accompany chemotherapy, especially with bleomycin, vincristine, and asparaginase. It can result from drugs that impair sweating, such as anticholinergics, phenothiazines, and monoamine oxidase inhibitors. A drug-induced fever typically disappears after the involved drug is discontinued. Fever can also stem from toxic doses of salicylates, amphetamines, and tricyclic antidepressants.
Inhaled anesthetics and muscle relaxants can trigger malignant hyperthermia in patients with this inherited trait.
Source: Alarming Signs and Symptoms: Lippincott Manual of Nursing Practice Series, 2007
Partial obstruction of the upper airway caused by aspiration of foreign body first produces sudden hoarseness, then a barking cough and inspiratory stridor. Other effects of this life-threatening condition include gagging, tachycardia, dyspnea, decreased breath sounds, wheezing and, possibly, cyanosis.
Epiglottiditis, a life-threatening disorder, has become less common since the use of influenza vaccines. It occurs nocturnally, heralded by a barking cough and a high fever. The child is hoarse, dysphagic, dyspneic, and restless and appears extremely ill and panicky. The cough may progress to severe respiratory distress with sternal and intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, cyanosis, and tachycardia. The child will struggle to get sufficient air as epiglottic edema increases. Epiglottiditis is a true medical emergency.
Also known as viral croup, acute laryngotracheobronchitis is most common in children between 9 and 18 months old and usually occurs in the fall and early winter. It initially produces low to moderate fever, runny nose, poor appetite, and infrequent cough. When the infection descends into the laryngotracheal area, barking cough, hoarseness, and inspiratory stridor occur.
As respiratory distress progresses, substernal and intercostal retractions occur along with tachycardia and shallow, rapid respirations. Sleeping in a dry room worsens these signs. The patient becomes restless, irritable, pale, and cyanotic.
Acute spasmodic croup usually occurs during sleep with the abrupt onset of a barking cough that awakens the child. Typically, he doesn’t have a fever but may be hoarse, restless, and dyspneic. As his respiratory distress worsens, the child may exhibit sternal and intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, tachycardia, cyanosis, and an anxious, frantic appearance. The signs usually subside within a few hours, but attacks tend to recur.
Source: Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses, 2007
Aspiration pneumonitis causes coughing that produces pink, frothy, possibly purulent sputum. The patient also has marked dyspnea, fever, tachypnea, fatigue, chest pain, halitosis, tachycardia, wheezing, and cyanosis.
A severe asthma attack, which can be life-threatening, may produce mucoid, tenacious sputum and mucus plugs. Such an attack typically starts with a dry cough and mild wheezing, then progresses to severe dyspnea, audible wheezing, chest tightness, and a productive cough. Other findings include apprehension, prolonged expirations, intercostal and supraclavicular retraction on inspiration, accessory muscle use, rhonchi, crackles, flaring nostrils, tachypnea, tachycardia, diaphoresis, and flushing or cyanosis. Attacks commonly occur at night or during sleep.
The chronic cough of bronchiectasis produces copious, mucopurulent sputum that has characteristic layering (top, frothy; middle, clear; bottom, dense with purulent particles). The patient has halitosis: His sputum may smell foul or sickeningly sweet. Other characteristic findings include hemoptysis, persistent coarse crackles over the affected lung area, occasional wheezing, rhonchi, exertional dyspnea, weight loss, fatigue, malaise, weakness, recurrent fever, and late-stage finger clubbing.
Chronic bronchitis causes a cough that may be nonproductive initially. Eventually, however, it produces mucoid sputum that becomes purulent. Secondary infection can also cause mucopurulent sputum, which may become blood-tinged and foul-smelling. The coughing, which may be paroxysmal during exercise, usually occurs when the patient is recumbent or rises from sleep.
The patient also exhibits prolonged expirations, increased use of accessory muscles for breathing, barrel chest, tachypnea, cyanosis, wheezing, exertional dyspnea, scattered rhonchi, coarse crackles (which can be precipitated by coughing), and late-stage clubbing.
Chemical pneumonitis causes a cough with purulent sputum. It can also cause dyspnea, wheezing, orthopnea, fever, malaise, and crackles; mucous membrane irritation of the conjunctivae, throat, and nose; laryngitis; or rhinitis. Signs and symptoms may increase for 24 to 48 hours after exposure, then resolve; if severe, however, they may recur 2 to 5 weeks later.
When a common cold causes productive coughing, the sputum is mucoid or mucopurulent. Early indications of the common cold include a dry, hacking cough, sneezing, headache, malaise, fatigue, rhinorrhea (watery to tenacious, mucopurulent secretions), nasal congestion, sore throat, myalgia, and arthralgia.
Legionnaires’ disease causes a cough that produces scant mucoid, nonpurulent, possibly blood-streaked sputum. Prodromal signs and symptoms typically include malaise, fatigue, weakness, anorexia, diffuse myalgia and, possibly, diarrhea. Then, within 48 hours, the patient develops a dry cough and a sudden high fever with chills. Many patients also have pleuritic chest pain, headache, tachypnea, tachycardia, nausea, vomiting, dyspnea, crackles, mild temporary amnesia, disorientation, confusion, flushing, mild diaphoresis, and prostration.
The cardinal sign of ruptured lung abscess is coughing that produces copious amounts of purulent, foul-smelling, possibly blood-tinged sputum. A ruptured abscess can also cause diaphoresis, anorexia, clubbing, weight loss, weakness, fatigue, fever with chills, dyspnea, headache, malaise, pleuritic chest pain, halitosis, inspiratory crackles, and tubular or amphoric breath sounds. The patient’s chest is dull on percussion on the affected side.
One of the earliest signs of bronchogenic carcinoma is a chronic cough that produces small amounts of purulent (or mucopurulent), blood-streaked sputum. In a patient with bronchoalveolar cancer, however, coughing produces large amounts of frothy sputum. Other signs and symptoms include dyspnea, anorexia, fatigue, weight loss, chest pain, fever, diaphoresis, wheezing, and clubbing.
Signs and symptoms of plague, caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis, include fever, chills, and swollen, inflamed, and tender lymph nodes near the site of the flea bite. Septicemic plague develops as a fulminant illness generally with the bubonic form. The onset of the pneumonic form is usually sudden with chills, fever, headache, and myalgia. Pulmonary signs and symptoms include productive cough, chest pain, tachypnea, dyspnea, hemoptysis, increasing respiratory distress, and cardiopulmonary insufficiency.
Bacterial pneumonia initially produces a dry cough that becomes productive. Associated signs and symptoms develop suddenly and include shaking chills, high fever, myalgia, headache, pleuritic chest pain that increases with chest movement, tachypnea, tachycardia, dyspnea, cyanosis, diaphoresis, decreased breath sounds, fine crackles, and rhonchi.
Severe, pulmonary edema is a life-threatening disorder that causes a cough that produces frothy, bloody sputum. Early signs and symptoms of pulmonary edema include exertional dyspnea; paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, followed by orthopnea; and coughing, which may be nonproductive initially. Others include fever, fatigue, tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, and ventricular gallop. As the patient’s respirations become increasingly rapid and labored, he develops more diffuse crackles and a productive cough, worsening tachycardia and, possibly, arrhythmias. His skin becomes cold, clammy, and cyanotic; his blood pressure falls; and his pulse becomes thready.
Pulmonary embolism is a life-threatening disorder that causes a cough that may be nonproductive or may produce blood-tinged sputum. Usually, the first symptom of a pulmonary embolism is severe dyspnea, which may be accompanied by angina or pleuritic chest pain. The patient experiences marked anxiety, a low-grade fever, tachycardia, tachypnea, and diaphoresis. Less common signs include massive hemoptysis, chest splinting, leg edema and, with a large embolus, cyanosis, syncope, and distended neck veins. The patient may also have a pleural friction rub, diffuse wheezing, crackles, chest dullness on percussion, decreased breath sounds, and signs of circulatory collapse.
Pulmonary emphysema causes a chronic productive cough with scant, mucoid, translucent, grayish white sputum that can become mucopurulent. The patient is thin and has the characteristic “pink puffer” appearance with weight loss, increased accessory muscle use, tachypnea, grunting expirations through pursed lips, diminished breath sounds, exertional dyspnea, rhonchi, barrel chest, and anorexia. Clubbing is a late sign.
Pulmonary tuberculosis causes a mild to severe productive cough along with some combination of hemoptysis, malaise, dyspnea, and pleuritic chest pain. Sputum may be scant and mucoid or copious and purulent. Typically, the patient experiences night sweats, easy fatigability, and weight loss. His breath sounds are amphoric. He may have chest dullness on percussion and, after coughing, increased tactile fremitus with crackles.
A productive cough with mucopurulent sputum is the earliest sign of silicosis. The patient also has exertional dyspnea, tachypnea, weight loss, fatigue, general weakness, and recurrent respiratory infections. Auscultation reveals end-inspiratory, fine crackles at the lung bases.
With tracheobronchitis, inflammation initially causes a nonproductive cough that later — following the onset of chills, sore throat, slight fever, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness — becomes productive as secretions increase. Sputum is mucoid, mucopurulent, or purulent. The patient typically has rhonchi and wheezes; he may also develop crackles. Severe tracheobronchitis may cause a fever of 101° to 102° F (38.3° to 38.9° C) and bronchospasm.
Bronchoscopy and pulmonary function tests may increase productive coughing.
Expectorants, of course, increase productive coughing. These include guaifenesin, potassium iodide, and terpin hydrate.
Intermittent positive-pressure breathing, nebulizer therapy, and incentive spirometry can help loosen secretions and cause or increase productive coughing.
Source: Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses, 2007
Severe earache accompanied by persistent ipsilateral headache, malaise, and recurrent mild fever characterizes extradural abscess, a serious complication of middle ear infection. The patient may also experience hearing loss.
Earache associated with acute barotrauma ranges from mild pressure to severe pain. Tympanic membrane ecchymosis or bleeding into the tympanic cavity may occur, producing a blue drumhead; the eardrum usually isn’t perforated.
Impacted cerumen (earwax) may cause a sensation of blockage or fullness in the ear. Additional features include partial hearing loss, itching and, possibly, dizziness and ringing in the ear.
Chondrodermatitis nodularis chronica produces small, painful, indurated areas along the upper rim of the auricle. The lesion may have a central core with scaly discharge.
Prolonged exposure to cold may cause burning or tingling pain in the ear, followed by numbness. The ear appears mottled and gray or white; it turns purplish blue as it’s warmed.
Infected hair follicles in the outer ear canal may produce severe, localized ear pain associated with a pus-filled furuncle (boil). The pain is aggravated by jaw movement and relieved by rupture or incision of the furuncle. Pinna tenderness, swelling of the auditory meatus, partial hearing loss, and a feeling of fullness in the ear canal may also occur.
Also known as Ramsay Hunt syndrome, herpes zoster oticus causes burning or stabbing ear pain, commonly associated with ear vesicles. The patient also complains of hearing loss and vertigo. Associated signs and symptoms include transitory, ipsilateral, facial paralysis; partial loss of taste; tongue vesicles; and nausea and vomiting.
Acute mastoiditis causes a dull ache behind the ear accompanied by low-grade fever (99° F to 100° F [37.2° C to 37.8° C]). The eardrum appears dull and edematous and may perforate, and soft tissue near the eardrum may sag. A purulent discharge is seen in the external canal.
Ménière’s disease is an inner ear disorder that can produce a sensation of fullness in the affected ear. Its classic effects, however, include severe vertigo, tinnitus, and sensorineural hearing loss. The patient may also experience nausea and vomiting, diaphoresis, and nystagmus.
Deep, boring ear pain and facial paralysis are late signs of a malignant tumor. Hearing loss and facial nerve dysfunction may accompany middle ear tumors.
Acute otitis externa begins with mild to moderate ear pain that occurs with tragus manipulation. The pain may be accompanied by low-grade fever, sticky yellow or purulent ear discharge, partial hearing loss, and a feeling of blockage. Later, ear pain intensifies, causing the entire side of the head to ache and throb. Fever may reach 104°F [40° C]. Examination reveals swelling of the tragus, external meatus, and external canal; eardrum erythema; and lymphadenopathy. The patient also complains of dizziness and malaise.
Acute otitis media is a middle ear inflammation that may be serous or suppurative. Acute serous otitis media may cause a feeling of fullness in the ear, hearing loss, and a vague sensation of top-heaviness. The eardrum may be slightly retracted, amber colored, and marked by air bubbles and a meniscus, or it may be blue-black from hemorrhage.
Severe, deep, throbbing ear pain, hearing loss, and fever that can reach 102°F (38.9° C) characterize acute suppurative otitis media.The pain increases steadily over several hours or days and may be aggravated by pressure on the mastoid antrum. Perforation of the eardrum is possible. Before rupture, the eardrum appears bulging and fiery red. Rupture causes purulent drainage and relieves the pain.
The result of acute otitis media, petrositis is an infection that produces deep ear pain with headache and pain behind the eye. Other findings include diplopia, loss of lateral gaze, vomiting, sensorineural hearing loss, vertigo and, possibly, nuchal rigidity.
Typically unilateral, temporomandibular joint (TMJ) infection produces ear pain that’s referred from the jaw joint. The pain is aggravated by pressure on the joint with jaw movement; it commonly radiates to the temporal area or the entire side of the head.
Source: Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses, 2007
The patient with cutaneous anthrax may experience a fever along with lymphadenopathy, malaise, and headache. After the bacterium Bacillus anthracis enters a cut or abrasion on the skin, the infection begins as a small, painless, or pruritic macular or papular lesion resembling an insect bite. Within 1 to 2 days, the lesion develops into a vesicle and then into a painless ulcer with a characteristic black, necrotic center.
Following the ingestion of meat contaminated with the bacterium Bacillus anthracis, the patient experiences fever, loss of appetite, nausea, and vomiting. The patient may also experience abdominal pain, severe bloody diarrhea, and hematemesis.
The initial signs and symptoms of inhalation anthrax are flulike, including fever, chills, weakness, cough, and chest pain. The disease generally occurs in two stages with a period of recovery after the initial symptoms. The second stage develops abruptly with rapid deterioration marked by fever, dyspnea, stridor, and hypotension, generally leading to death within 24 hours.
Fever, bloody diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, and abdominal cramps occur after eating foods contaminated with the bacterial strain Escherichia coli 0157:H7. In children younger than age 5 and in elderly patients, hemolytic uremic syndrome may develop (in which the red blood cells are destroyed), and this may ultimately lead to acute renal failure.
When immune complex dysfunction is present, fever usually remains low, although moderate elevations may accompany erythema multiforme. Fever may be remittent or intermittent, as in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) or systemic lupus erythematosus, or sustained, as in polyarteritis. As one of several vague, prodromal complaints (such as fatigue, anorexia, and weight loss), fever produces nocturnal diaphoresis and accompanies such associated signs and symptoms as diarrhea and a persistent cough (with AIDS) or morning stiffness (with rheumatoid arthritis). Other disease-specific findings include headache and vision loss (temporal arteritis); pain and stiffness in the neck, shoulders, back, or pelvis (ankylosing spondylitis and polymyalgia rheumatica); skin and mucous membrane lesions (erythema multiforme); and urethritis with urethral discharge and conjunctivitis (Reiter’s syndrome).
Fever ranges from low (in patients with Crohn’s disease or ulcerative colitis) to extremely high (in those with bacterial pneumonia, necrotizing fasciitis, or Ebola virus or Hantavirus). It may be remittent, as in those with infectious mononucleosis or otitis media; hectic as in those with lung abscess, influenza, or endocarditis; sustained, as in those with meningitis; or relapsing, as in those with malaria. Fever may arise abruptly, as in those with toxic shock syndrome or Rocky Mountain spotted fever, or insidiously, as in those with mycoplasmal pneumonia. In patients with hepatitis, fever may represent a disease prodrome; in those with appendicitis, it follows the acute stage. Its sudden late appearance with tachycardia, tachypnea, and confusion heralds life-threatening septic shock in patients with peritonitis or gram-negative bacteremia.
Associated signs and symptoms involve every system. General systemic complaints include weakness, anorexia, and malaise.
Primary neoplasms and metastases can produce prolonged fever of varying elevations. For instance, acute leukemia may present insidiously with low fever, pallor, and bleeding tendencies, or more abruptly with high fever, frank bleeding, and prostration. Occasionally, Hodgkin’s disease produces undulant fever or Pel-Ebstein fever, an irregularly relapsing fever.
In addition to fever and nocturnal diaphoresis, neoplastic disease typically causes anorexia, fatigue, malaise, and weight loss. Examination may reveal lesions, lymphadenopathy, palpable masses, and hepatosplenomegaly.
Plague is an infection caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis. The bubonic form of plague causes fever, chills, and swollen, inflamed, and tender lymph nodes near the site of the bite. The septicemic form develops as a fulminant illness generally with the bubonic form. The pneumonic form manifests as a sudden onset of chills, fever, headache, and myalgia after person-to-person transmission via the respiratory tract. Other signs and symptoms of the pneumonic form include productive cough, chest pain, tachypnea, dyspnea, hemoptysis, increasing respiratory distress, and cardiopulmonary insufficiency.
Rhabdomyolysis produces fever, muscle weakness or pain, nausea, vomiting, malaise, or dark reddish brown urine. Acute renal failure is the most frequently reported complication of the disorder.
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) is an acute infectious disease of unknown etiology that generally begins with a fever (usually greater than 100.4° F [38° C]). Other symptoms include headache, malaise, a dry nonproductive cough, and dyspnea. The severity of the illness is highly variable, ranging from mild illness to pneumonia and, in some cases, progressing to respiratory failure and death.
Initial signs and symptoms of smallpox (also known as variola major) include high fever, malaise, prostration, severe headache, backache, and abdominal pain. A maculopapular rash develops on the mucosa of the mouth, pharynx, face, and forearms and then spreads to the trunk and legs. Within 2 days, the rash becomes vesicular and later pustular. The lesions develop at the same time, appear identical, and are more prominent on the face and extremities. The pustules are round, firm, and deeply embedded in the skin. After about 8 to 9 days, the pustules form a crust, and later the scab separates from the skin, leaving a pitted scar. In fatal cases, death results from encephalitis, extensive bleeding, or secondary infection.
Sudden onset of fever that rises rapidly and remains as high as 107° F (41.7° C) occurs in life-threatening disorders, such as heatstroke, thyroid storm, neuroleptic malignant syndrome, and malignant hyperthermia, and in lesions of the central nervous system (CNS). Low or moderate fever appears in dehydrated patients.
Prolonged high fever commonly produces vomiting, anhidrosis, decreased LOC, and hot, flushed skin. Related cardiovascular effects may include tachycardia, tachypnea, and hypotension. Other disease-specific findings include skin changes: dry skin and mucous membranes, poor skin turgor, and oliguria with dehydration; mottled cyanosis with malignant hyperthermia; diarrhea with thyroid storm; and ominous signs of increased intracranial pressure (decreased LOC with bradycardia, widened pulse pressure, and increased systolic pressure) with CNS tumor, trauma, or hemorrhage.
Also known as rabbit fever, tularemia is an infectious disease that causes abrupt onset of fever, chills, headache, generalized myalgia, nonproductive cough, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and empyema.
Mild infection is common from West Nile encephalitis, a mosquito-borne Flavivirus. Signs and symptoms include fever, headache, and body aches, commonly with skin rash and swollen lymph glands. More severe infection is marked by high fever, headache, neck stiffness, stupor, disorientation, coma, tremors, occasional seizures, paralysis and, rarely, death.
CULTURAL CUE:West Nile encephalitis is commonly found in Africa, West Asia, and the Middle East. It rarely occurs in North America.
Fever and rash commonly result from hypersensitivity to antifungals, sulfonamides, penicillins, cephalosporins, tetracyclines, barbiturates, phenytoin, quinidine, iodides, phenolphthalein, methyldopa, procainamide, and some antitoxins. Fever can accompany chemotherapy, especially with bleomycin, vincristine, and asparaginase. It can result from drugs that impair sweating, such as anticholinergics, phenothiazines, and monoamine oxidase inhibitors. A drug-induced fever typically disappears after the involved drug is discontinued. Fever can also stem from toxic doses of salicylates, amphetamines, and tricyclic antidepressants.
Inhaled anesthetics and muscle relaxants can trigger malignant hyperthermia in patients with this inherited trait.
Source: Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses, 2007
Partial occlusion of the upper airway produces a sudden onset of dry, paroxysmal coughing. The patient is gagging, wheezing, and hoarse, with stridor, tachycardia, and decreased breath sounds. If the patient has aspirated a foreign body he may exhibit the universal sign for choking — a hand clutched to the throat, with thumb and fingers extended.
Inhalation anthrax is caused by inhalation of aerosolized spores of the gram-positive bacterium Bacillus anthracis. Initial signs and symptoms are flulike and include fever, chills, weakness, cough, and chest pain. The disease generally occurs in two stages with a period of recovery after the initial signs and symptoms. The second stage develops abruptly with rapid deterioration marked by fever, dyspnea, stridor, and hypotension generally leading to death within 24 hours. Radiologic findings include mediastinitis and symmetric mediastinal widening.
A thoracic aortic aneurysm causes a brassy cough with dyspnea, hoarseness, wheezing, and a substernal ache in the shoulders, lower back, or abdomen. The patient may also have facial or neck edema, neck vein distention, dysphagia, prominent veins over his chest, stridor and, possibly, paresthesia or neuralgia.
Asthma attacks commonly occur at night, starting with a nonproductive cough and mild wheezing; this progresses to severe dyspnea, audible wheezing, chest tightness, and a cough that produces thick mucus. Other signs include apprehension, rhonchi, prolonged expirations, intercostal and supraclavicular retractions on inspiration, accessory muscle use, flaring nostrils, tachypnea, tachycardia, diaphoresis, and flushing or cyanosis.
As lung tissue deflates, it stimulates cough receptors, causing a nonproductive cough. The patient with atelectasis may also have pleuritic chest pain, anxiety, dyspnea, tachypnea, and tachycardia. His skin may be cyanotic and diaphoretic, his breath sounds may be decreased, his chest may be dull on percussion, and he may exhibit inspiratory lag, substernal or intercostal retractions, decreased vocal fremitus, and tracheal deviation toward the affected side.
Chronic bronchitis starts with a nonproductive, hacking cough that later becomes productive. Other findings include prolonged expiration, wheezing, dyspnea, accessory muscle use, barrel chest, cyanosis, tachypnea, crackles, and scattered rhonchi. Clubbing can occur in late stages.
The earliest indicators of bronchogenic carcinoma can be a chronic, nonproductive cough, dyspnea, and vague chest pain. The patient may also have wheezing, hemoptysis, and stridor.
The common cold generally starts with a nonproductive, hacking cough and progresses to some mix of sneezing, headache, malaise, fatigue, rhinorrhea, myalgia, arthralgia, nasal congestion, and sore throat.
With esophageal achalasia, regurgitation and aspiration produce a dry cough. The patient may also have recurrent pulmonary infections and dysphagia. The patient may report weight loss, heartburn, and chest pain that increases after eating.
The patient with esophageal diverticula has a nocturnal nonproductive cough, regurgitation and aspiration, dyspepsia, and dysphagia. His neck may appear swollen and have a gurgling sound. He may also exhibit halitosis and weight loss.
Esophageal occlusion is marked by immediate nonproductive coughing and gagging, with a sensation of something stuck in the throat. Other findings include neck or chest pain, dysphagia, and the inability to swallow.
Esophagitis with reflux commonly causes a nonproductive nocturnal cough due to regurgitation and aspiration. The patient may experience chest pain that mimics angina pectoris; heartburn that worsens if he lies down after eating; and increased salivation, dysphagia, hematemesis, and melena.
Hodgkin’s disease may cause a crowing nonproductive cough. However, the earliest sign is usually painless swelling of one of the cervical lymph nodes or, occasionally, of the axillary, mediastinal, or inguinal lymph nodes. Another early sign is pruritus. Other findings depend on the degree and location of systemic involvement and include dyspnea, dysphagia, hepatosplenomegaly, edema, jaundice, nerve pain, and hyperpigmentation.
With hypersensitivity pneumonitis, an acute nonproductive cough, fever, dyspnea, and malaise usually occur 5 to 6 hours after exposure to an antigen. The patient may also report chest tightness and extreme fatigue.
A patient with interstitial lung disease has a nonproductive cough and progressive dyspnea. He may also be cyanotic and have clubbing, fine crackles, fatigue, variable chest pain, and weight loss. Other findings include dyspnea on exertion and vague chest pain.
A mild, nonproductive cough is an early sign of a laryngeal tumor, in addition to minor throat discomfort and hoarseness. Later, dysphagia, dyspnea, cervical lymphadenopathy, stridor, and earache may occur.
In its acute form, laryngitis causes a nonproductive cough with localized pain (especially when the patient is swallowing or speaking) as well as fever and malaise. His hoarseness can range from mild to complete loss of voice.
After a prodrome of malaise, headache and, possibly, diarrhea, anorexia, diffuse myalgia, and general weakness, legionnaires’disease causes a nonproductive cough that later produces mucoid, mucopurulent and, possibly, bloody sputum.
Lung abscess typically begins with nonproductive coughing, weakness, dyspnea, and pleuritic chest pain. The patient may also exhibit diaphoresis, fever, headache, malaise, fatigue, crackles, decreased breath sounds, anorexia, and weight loss. Later, his cough produces large amounts of purulent, foul-smelling, possibly bloody sputum.
A large mediastinal tumor produces a nonproductive cough, dyspnea, and retrosternal pain. The patient may also develop stertorous respirations with suprasternal retraction on inspiration, hoarseness, dysphagia, tracheal shift or tug, neck vein distention, and facial or neck edema.
A nonproductive cough along with dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and decreased chest motion are characteristic of pleural effusion. Other findings include pleural friction rub, tachycardia, tachypnea, egophony, flatness on percussion, decreased or absent breath sounds, and decreased tactile fremitus.
Bacterial pneumonia usually starts with a nonproductive, hacking, painful cough that rapidly becomes productive. Other findings include shaking chills, headache, high fever, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, tachypnea, tachycardia, grunting respirations, nasal flaring, decreased breath sounds, fine crackles, rhonchi, and cyanosis. The patient’s chest may be dull on percussion.
With mycoplasma pneumonia, a nonproductive cough arises 2 to 3 days after the onset of malaise, headache, and sore throat. The cough can be paroxysmal, causing substernal chest pain. Fever commonly occurs, but the patient doesn’t appear seriously ill.
Viral pneumonia causes a nonproductive, hacking cough and the gradual onset of malaise, headache, anorexia, and low-grade fever.
Pneumothorax, a life-threatening disorder, causes a dry cough and signs of respiratory distress, such as severe dyspnea, tachycardia, tachypnea, and cyanosis. The patient experiences sudden, sharp chest pain that worsens with chest movement as well as subcutaneous crepitation, hyperresonance or tympany, decreased vocal fremitus, and decreased or absent breath sounds on the affected side.
Pulmonary edema initially causes a dry cough, exertional dyspnea, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, orthopnea, tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, and ventricular gallop. If pulmonary edema is severe, the patient’s respirations become more rapid and labored, with diffuse crackles and coughing that produces frothy, bloody sputum.
A life-threatening pulmonary embolism may suddenly produce a dry cough along with dyspnea and pleuritic or anginal chest pain. More commonly, though, the cough produces blood-tinged sputum. Tachycardia and low-grade fever are also common; less common signs and symptoms include massive hemoptysis, chest splinting, leg edema and, with a large embolus, cyanosis, syncope, and distended neck veins. The patient may also have a pleural friction rub, diffuse wheezing, dullness on percussion, and decreased breath sounds.
With sarcoidosis, a nonproductive cough is accompanied by dyspnea, substernal pain, and malaise. The patient may also develop fatigue, arthralgia, myalgia, weight loss, tachypnea, crackles, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, skin lesions, vision impairment, difficulty swallowing, and arrhythmias.
CULTURAL CUE:The risk of sarcoidosis is greatest in young adult Blacks, especially Black women. Others at high risk include those of Scandinavian, German, Irish, or Puerto Rican descent.
The incubation period of this acute infectious disease of unknown etiology is 2 to 7 days, and the illness generally begins with a fever (usually greater than 100.4° F [38° C]). Other symptoms of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) include headache, malaise, a dry nonproductive cough, and dyspnea. The severity of the illness is highly variable, ranging from mild illness to pneumonia and, in some cases, progressing to respiratory failure and death.
CULTURAL CUE:Most cases of SARS have been reported in Asia (China, Vietnam, Singapore, Thailand), although some cases have appeared in Europe and North America.
Chronic sinusitis can cause a chronic nonproductive cough due to postnasal drip. The patient’s nasal mucosa may appear inflamed, and he may have nasal congestion and profuse drainage. Usually, his breath smells musty.
Initially, acute tracheobronchitis produces a dry cough that later becomes productive as secretions increase. Chills, sore throat, slight fever, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness generally precede the cough’s onset. Rhonchi and wheezes are usually heard. Severe illness causes a fever of 101° F to 102° F (38.3° to 38.9° C) and possibly bronchospasm, with severe wheezing and increased coughing.
Following inhalation of the gram-negative, non-spore-forming bacterium Francisella tularensis, patients with tularemia show signs and symptoms including the abrupt onset of fever, chills, headache, generalized myalgia, nonproductive cough, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and empyema.
Pulmonary function tests and bronchoscopy may stimulate cough receptors, triggering coughing.
Irritation of the carina during suctioning or deep endotracheal or tracheal tube placement can trigger a paroxysmal or hacking cough. Intermittent positive-pressure breathing or spirometry can also cause a nonproductive cough. Some inhalants, such as pentamidine, may stimulate coughing.
Source: Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses, 2007
Source: The Diagnostic Approach to Symptoms and Signs in Pediatrics, 2006
Source: The Diagnostic Approach to Symptoms and Signs in Pediatrics, 2006
Source: The Diagnostic Approach to Symptoms and Signs in Pediatrics, 2006
Source: The Diagnostic Approach to Symptoms and Signs in Pediatrics, 2006
Aspiration of foreign body.Partial obstruction of the upper airway first produces sudden hoarseness, and then a barking cough and inspiratory stridor. Other effects of this life-threatening condition include gagging, tachycardia, dyspnea, decreased breath sounds, wheezing and, possibly, cyanosis.
Epiglottiditis.Epiglottiditis is a life-threatening disorder that has become less common since the use of influenza vaccines. It occurs nocturnally, heralded by a barking cough and a high fever. The child is hoarse, dysphagic, dyspneic, and restless and appears extremely ill and panicky. The cough may progress to severe respiratory distress with sternal and intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, cyanosis, and tachycardia. The child will struggle to get sufficient air as epiglottic edema increases. Epiglottiditis is a true medical emergency.
Laryngotracheobronchitis (acute).Also known as viral croup, laryngotracheobronchitisinitially produces a low to moderate fever, a runny nose, a poor appetite, and an infrequent cough. When the infection descends into the laryngotracheal area, a barking cough, hoarseness, and inspiratory stridor occur.
As respiratory distress progresses, substernal and intercostal retractions occur along with tachycardia and shallow, rapid respirations. Sleeping in a dry room worsens these signs. The patient becomes restless, irritable, pale, and cyanotic.
Spasmodic croup.Acute spasmodic croup usually occurs during sleep with the abrupt onset of a barking cough that awakens the child. Typically, he doesn't have a fever, but may be hoarse, restless, and dyspneic. As his respiratory distress worsens, the child may exhibit sternal and intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, tachycardia, cyanosis, and an anxious, frantic appearance. The signs usually subside within a few hours, but attacks tend to recur.
Source: Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Actinomycosis.Actinomycosis begins with a cough that produces purulent sputum. A fever, weight loss, fatigue, weakness, dyspnea, night sweats, pleuritic chest pain, and hemoptysis may also occur.
Aspiration pneumonitis.Aspiration pneumonitis causes coughing that produces pink, frothy and, possibly, purulent sputum. The patient also has marked dyspnea, a fever, tachypnea, tachycardia, wheezing, and cyanosis.
Bronchiectasis.The chronic cough of bronchiectasis produces copious, mucopurulent sputum that has characteristic layering (top, frothy; middle, clear; bottom, dense with purulent particles). The patient has halitosis; his sputum may smell foul or sickeningly sweet. Other characteristic findings include hemoptysis, persistent coarse crackles over the affected lung area, occasional wheezing, rhonchi, exertional dyspnea, weight loss, fatigue, malaise, weakness, a recurrent fever, and late-stage finger clubbing.
Bronchitis (chronic).Bronchitis causes a cough that may be nonproductive initially. Eventually, however, it produces mucoid sputum that becomes purulent. Secondary infection can also cause mucopurulent sputum, which may become blood-tinged and foul-smelling. The coughing, which may be paroxysmal during exercise, usually occurs when the patient is recumbent or rises from sleep.
The patient also exhibits prolonged expirations, increased use of accessory muscles for breathing, barrel chest, tachypnea, cyanosis, wheezing, exertional dyspnea, scattered rhonchi, coarse crackles (which can be precipitated by coughing), and late-stage clubbing.
Chemical pneumonitis.Chemical pneumonitis causes a cough with purulent sputum. It can also cause dyspnea, wheezing, orthopnea, a fever, malaise, and crackles; mucous membrane irritation of the conjunctivae, throat, and nose; laryngitis; or rhinitis. Signs and symptoms may increase for 24 to 48 hours after exposure, then resolve; if severe, however, they may recur 2 to 5 weeks later.
Common cold.When the common cold causes productive coughing, the sputum is mucoid or mucopurulent. Early indications include a dry hacking cough, sneezing, a headache, malaise, fatigue, rhinorrhea (watery to tenacious, mucopurulent secretions), nasal congestion, a sore throat, myalgia, and arthralgia.
Lung abscess (ruptured).The cardinal sign of a ruptured lung abscess is coughing that produces copious amounts of purulent, foul-smelling and, possibly, blood-tinged sputum. A ruptured abscess can also cause diaphoresis, anorexia, clubbing, weight loss, weakness, fatigue, a fever with chills, dyspnea, a headache, malaise, pleuritic chest pain, halitosis, inspiratory crackles, and tubular or amphoric breath sounds. The patient's chest is dull on percussion on the affected side.
Lung cancer.One of the earliest signs of bronchogenic carcinoma is a chronic cough that produces small amounts of purulent (or mucopurulent), blood-streaked sputum. In a patient with bronchoalveolar cancer, however, coughing produces large amounts of frothy sputum. Other signs and symptoms include dyspnea, anorexia, fatigue, weight loss, chest pain, a fever, diaphoresis, wheezing, and clubbing.
Nocardiosis.Nocardiosis causes a productive cough (with purulent, thick, tenacious, and possibly blood-tinged sputum) and fever that may last several months. Other findings include night sweats, pleuritic pain, anorexia, malaise, fatigue, weight loss, and diminished or absent breath sounds. The patient's chest is dull on percussion.
North American blastomycosis.North American blastomycosis is a chronic disorder that produces coughing that's dry and hacking or produces bloody or purulent sputum. Other findings include pleuritic chest pain, a fever, chills, anorexia, weight loss, malaise, fatigue, night sweats, cutaneous lesions (small, painless, nonpruritic macules or papules), and prostration.
Plague(Yersinia pestis).The pneumonic form of plague may be contracted from person-to-person through direct contact via the respiratory system or through biological warfare from aerosolization and inhalation of the organism. The onset is usually sudden with chills, a fever, a headache, and myalgia. Pulmonary signs and symptoms include a productive cough, chest pain, tachypnea, dyspnea, hemoptysis, increasing respiratory distress, and cardiopulmonary insufficiency.
Pneumonia.Bacterial pneumonia initially produces a dry cough that becomes productive. Associated signs and symptoms develop suddenly and include shaking chills, a high fever, myalgia, headache, pleuritic chest pain that increases with chest movement, tachypnea, tachycardia, dyspnea, cyanosis, diaphoresis, decreased breath sounds, fine crackles, and rhonchi.
Mycoplasma pneumonia may cause a cough that produces scant blood-flecked sputum. Typically, however, a nonproductive cough starts 2 or 3 days after the onset of malaise, a headache, a fever, and a sore throat. Paroxysmal coughing causes substernal chest pain. Patients may develop crackles, but generally don't appear seriously ill.
Psittacosis.As psittacosis progresses, the characteristic hacking cough, nonproductive at first, may later produce a small amount of mucoid, blood-streaked sputum. The infection may begin abruptly, with chills, a fever, a headache, myalgia, and prostration. Other signs and symptoms include tachypnea, fine crackles, chest pain (rare), epistaxis, photophobia, abdominal distention and tenderness, nausea, vomiting, and a faint macular rash. Severe infection may produce stupor, delirium, and coma.
Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis.Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis causes a nonproductive or slightly productive cough with a fever, occasional chills, pleuritic chest pain, a sore throat, a headache, backache, malaise, marked weakness, anorexia, hemoptysis, and an itchy macular rash. Rhonchi and wheezing may be heard. The disease may spread to other areas, causing arthralgia, swelling of the knees and ankles, and erythema nodosum or erythema multiforme.
Pulmonary edema.Severe, pulmonary edema, which is a life-threatening disorder, causes a cough that produces frothy, bloody sputum. Early signs and symptoms include exertional dyspnea; paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, followed by orthopnea; and coughing, which may be nonproductive initially. Others include a fever, fatigue, tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, and a ventricular gallop. As the patient's respirations become increasingly rapid and labored, he develops more diffuse crackles and a productive cough, anxiety, restlessness, worsening tachycardia and, possibly, arrhythmias. His skin becomes cold, clammy, and cyanotic; his blood pressure falls; and his pulse becomes thready.
Pulmonary embolism.Pulmonary embolism is a life-threatening disorder that causes a cough that may be nonproductive or may produce blood-tinged sputum. Usually, the first symptom of a pulmonary embolism is severe dyspnea, which may be accompanied by angina or pleuritic chest pain. The patient experiences marked anxiety, a low-grade fever, tachycardia, tachypnea, and diaphoresis. Less-common signs include massive hemoptysis, chest splinting, leg edema and, with a large embolus, cyanosis, syncope, and jugular vein distention. The patient may also have a pleural friction rub, diffuse wheezing, crackles, chest dullness on percussion, decreased breath sounds, and signs of circulatory collapse.
Pulmonary tuberculosis (TB).Pulmonary TB causes a mild to severe productive cough along with some combination of hemoptysis, malaise, dyspnea, and pleuritic chest pain. Sputum may be scant and mucoid or copious and purulent. Typically, the patient experiences night sweats, easy fatigability, and weight loss. His breath sounds are amphoric. He may have chest dullness on percussion and, after coughing, increased tactile fremitus with crackles.
Silicosis.A productive cough with mucopurulent sputum is the earliest sign of silicosis. The patient also has exertional dyspnea, tachypnea, weight loss, fatigue, general weakness, and recurrent respiratory infections. Auscultation reveals end-inspiratory, fine crackles at the lung bases.
Tracheobronchitis.Inflammation initially causes a nonproductive cough that later—following the onset of chills, a sore throat, a slight fever, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness—becomes productive as secretions increase. Sputum is mucoid, mucopurulent, or purulent. The patient typically has rhonchi and wheezes; he may also develop crackles. Severe tracheobronchitis may cause a fever of 101° to 102° F (38.3° to 38.9° C) and bronchospasm.
Diagnostic tests.Bronchoscopy and pulmonary function tests (PFTs) may increase productive coughing.
Drugs.Expectorants increase productive coughing. These include ammonium chloride, calcium iodide, guaifenesin, iodinated glycerol, potassium iodide, and terpin hydrate.
Respiratory therapy.Intermittent positive-pressure breathing, nebulizer therapy, and incentive spirometry can help loosen secretions and cause or increase productive coughing.
Source: Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Airway occlusion.Partial occlusion of the upper airway produces a sudden onset of dry, paroxysmal coughing. The patient is gagging, wheezing, and hoarse, with stridor, tachycardia, and decreased breath sounds.
Anthrax (inhalation).Inhalation anthrax is caused by inhaling aerosolized spores. Initial signs and symptoms are flulike and include a fever, chills, weakness, a cough, and chest pain. The disease generally occurs in two stages, with a period of recovery after the initial signs and symptoms. The second stage develops abruptly with rapid deterioration marked by a fever, dyspnea, stridor, and hypotension generally leading to death within 24 hours. Radiologic findings include mediastinitis and symmetric mediastinal widening.
Aortic aneurysm (thoracic).Aortic aneurysm causes a brassy cough with dyspnea, hoarseness, wheezing, and a substernal ache in the shoulders, lower back, or abdomen. The patient may also have facial or neck edema, jugular vein distention, dysphagia, prominent veins over his chest, stridor and, possibly, paresthesia or neuralgia.
Asthma.Asthma attacks typically occur at night, starting with a nonproductive cough and mild wheezing; this progresses to severe dyspnea, audible wheezing, chest tightness, and a cough that produces thick mucus. Other signs include apprehension, rhonchi, prolonged expirations, intercostal and supraclavicular retractions on inspiration, accessory muscle use, flaring nostrils, tachypnea, tachycardia, diaphoresis, and flushing or cyanosis.
Atelectasis.As lung tissue deflates, it stimulates cough receptors, causing a nonproductive cough. The patient may also have pleuritic chest pain, anxiety, dyspnea, tachypnea, and tachycardia. His skin may be cyanotic and diaphoretic, his breath sounds may be decreased, his chest may be dull on percussion, and he may exhibit inspiratory lag, substernal or intercostal retractions, decreased vocal fremitus, and tracheal deviation toward the affected side.
Avian influenza.Individuals infected with avian influenza may initially have symptoms of conventional influenza, including a nonproductive cough, fever, sore throat, and muscle aches. The most virulent avian virus, influenza A (H5N1), may lead to severe and life-threatening complications, such as acute respiratory distress and pneumonia.
Bronchitis (chronic).Bronchitis starts with a nonproductive, hacking cough that later becomes productive. Other findings include prolonged expiration, wheezing, dyspnea, accessory muscle use, barrel chest, cyanosis, tachypnea, crackles, and scattered rhonchi. Clubbing can occur in late stages.
Bronchogenic carcinoma.The earliest indicators of bronchogenic carcinoma can be a chronic, nonproductive cough; dyspnea; and vague chest pain. The patient may also be wheezing.
Common cold.The common cold generally starts with a nonproductive, hacking cough and progresses to some mix of sneezing, headaches, malaise, fatigue, rhinorrhea, myalgia, arthralgia, nasal congestion, and a sore throat.
Esophageal achalasia.In esophageal achalasia, regurgitation and aspiration produce a dry cough. The patient may also have recurrent pulmonary infections and dysphagia.
Esophageal diverticula.The patient with esophageal diverticula has a nocturnal nonproductive cough, regurgitation and aspiration, dyspepsia, and dysphagia. His neck may appear swollen and have a gurgling sound. He may also exhibit halitosis and weight loss.
Esophageal occlusion.Esophageal occlusion is marked by immediate nonproductive coughing and gagging, with a sensation of something stuck in the throat. Other findings include neck or chest pain, dysphagia, and the inability to swallow.
Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome.A nonproductive cough is common in patients with Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, which is marked by noncardiogenic pulmonary edema. Other findings include a headache, myalgia, fever, nausea, and vomiting.
Hypersensitivity pneumonitis.With hypersensitivity pneumonitis, an acute nonproductive cough, a fever, dyspnea, and malaise usually occur 5 or 6 hours after exposure to an antigen.
Interstitial lung disease.A patient with interstitial lung disease has a nonproductive cough and progressive dyspnea. He may also be cyanotic and have clubbing, fine crackles, fatigue, variable chest pain, and weight loss.
Laryngeal tumor.A mild, nonproductive cough is an early sign of a laryngeal tumor, in addition to minor throat discomfort and hoarseness. Later, dysphagia, dyspnea, cervical lymphadenopathy, stridor, and an earache may occur.
Laryngitis.In its acute form, laryngitis causes a nonproductive cough with localized pain (especially when the patient is swallowing or speaking) as well as fever and malaise. His hoarseness can range from mild to complete loss of voice.
Lung abscess.Lung abscess typically begins with a nonproductive cough, weakness, dyspnea, and pleuritic chest pain. The patient may also exhibit diaphoresis, a fever, a headache, malaise, fatigue, crackles, decreased breath sounds, anorexia, and weight loss. Later, his cough produces large amounts of purulent, foul-smelling and, possibly, bloody sputum.
Pleural effusion.A nonproductive cough along with dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and decreased chest motion are characteristic of pleural effusion. Other findings include a pleural friction rub, tachycardia, tachypnea, egophony, flatness on percussion, decreased or absent breath sounds, and decreased tactile fremitus.
Pneumonia.Bacterial pneumonia usually starts with a nonproductive, hacking, painful cough that rapidly becomes productive. Other findings include shaking chills, a headache, a high fever, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, tachypnea, tachycardia, grunting respirations, nasal flaring, decreased breath sounds, fine crackles, rhonchi, and cyanosis. The patient's chest may be dull on percussion.
With mycoplasma pneumonia, a nonproductive cough arises 2 or 3 days after the onset of malaise, a headache, and a sore throat. The cough can be paroxysmal, causing substernal chest pain. Fever commonly occurs, but the patient doesn't appear seriously ill.
Viral pneumonia causes a nonproductive, hacking cough and the gradual onset of malaise, headache, anorexia, and a low-grade fever.
Pneumothorax.Pneumothorax is a life-threatening disorder that causes a dry cough and signs of respiratory distress, such as severe dyspnea, tachycardia, tachypnea, and cyanosis. The patient experiences sudden, sharp chest pain that worsens with chest movement as well as subcutaneous crepitation, hyperresonance or tympany, decreased vocal fremitus, and decreased or absent breath sounds on the affected side.
Pulmonary edema.Pulmonary edema initially causes a dry cough, exertional dyspnea, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, orthopnea, tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, a ventricular gallop, and anxiety and restlessness. If pulmonary edema is severe, the patient's respirations become more rapid and labored, with diffuse crackles and coughing that produces frothy, bloody sputum.
Pulmonary embolism.A life-threatening pulmonary embolism may suddenly produce a dry cough along with dyspnea and pleuritic or anginal chest pain. Typically, however, the cough produces blood-tinged sputum. Tachycardia and a low-grade fever are also common; less common signs and symptoms include massive hemoptysis, chest splinting, leg edema and, with a large embolus, cyanosis, syncope, and jugular vein distention. The patient may also have a pleural friction rub, diffuse wheezing, dullness on percussion, and decreased breath sounds.
Sarcoidosis.With sarcoidosis, a nonproductive cough is accompanied by dyspnea, substernal pain, and malaise. The patient may also develop fatigue, arthralgia, myalgia, weight loss, tachypnea, crackles, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, skin lesions, visual impairment, difficulty swallowing, and arrhythmias.
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS).SARS generally begins with a fever (usually greater than 100.4° F [38° C]). Other symptoms include a headache; malaise; a dry, nonproductive cough; and dyspnea. The severity of the illness is highly variable, ranging from mild illness to pneumonia and, in some cases, progressing to respiratory failure and death.
Tracheobronchitis (acute).Initially, tracheobronchitis produces a dry cough that later becomes productive as secretions increase. Chills, a sore throat, a slight fever, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness generally precede the cough's onset. Rhonchi and wheezes are usually heard. Severe illness causes a fever of 101° to 102° F (38.3° to 38.9° C) and, possibly, bronchospasm, with severe wheezing and increased coughing.
Tularemia.Signs and symptoms of tularemia following inhalation of the organism include the abrupt onset of a fever, chills, a headache, generalized myalgia, a nonproductive cough, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and empyema.
Diagnostic tests.Pulmonary function tests (PFTs) and bronchoscopy may stimulate cough receptors and trigger coughing.
Treatments.Irritation of the carina during suctioning or deep endotracheal or tracheal tube placement can trigger a paroxysmal or hacking cough. Intermittent positive-pressure breathing or spirometry can also cause a nonproductive cough. Some inhalants, such as pentamidine, may stimulate coughing.
Source: Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Abscess (extradural).Severe earache accompanied by a persistent ipsilateral headache, malaise, and a recurrent mild fever characterizes an abscess, which is a serious complication of middle ear infection. Barotrauma (acute).Earache associated with barotrauma ranges from mild pressure to severe pain. Tympanic membrane ecchymosis or bleeding into the tympanic cavity may occur, producing a blue drumhead; the eardrum usually isn't perforated. Cerumen impaction.Impacted cerumen (earwax) may cause a sensation of blockage or fullness in the ear. Additional features include partial hearing loss, itching and, possibly, dizziness. Herpes zoster oticus (Ramsay Hunt syndrome).Herpes zoster oticus causes burning or stabbing ear pain, commonly associated with ear vesicles. The patient also complains of hearing loss and vertigo. Associated signs and symptoms include transitory, ipsilateral, facial paralysis; partial loss of taste; tongue vesicles; and nausea and vomiting. Keratosis obturans.Mild ear pain is common with keratosis obturans, along with otorrhea and tinnitus. Inspection reveals a white glistening plug obstructing the external meatus. Mastoiditis (acute).Mastoiditis causes a dull ache behind the ear accompanied by a low-grade fever (99° to 100° F [37.2° to 37.8° C]). The eardrum appears dull and edematous and may perforate, and soft tissue near the eardrum may sag. A purulent discharge is seen in the external canal. Ménière's disease.Ménière's disease is an inner ear disorder that can produce a sensation of fullness in the affected ear. Its classic effects, however, include severe vertigo, tinnitus, and sensorineural hearing loss. The patient may also experience nausea and vomiting, diaphoresis, and nystagmus. Otitis externa.An earache characterizes acute and malignant otitis externa. Acute otitis externa begins with mild to moderate ear pain that occurs with tragus manipulation. The pain may be accompanied by a low-grade fever, sticky yellow or purulent ear discharge, partial hearing loss, and a feeling of blockage. Later, ear pain intensifies, causing the entire side of the head to ache and throb. Fever may reach 104° F (40° C). Examination reveals swelling of the tragus, external meatus, and external canal; eardrum erythema; and lymphadenopathy. The patient also complains of dizziness and malaise. Malignant otitis externa abruptly causes ear pain that's aggravated by moving the auricle or tragus. The pain is accompanied by intense itching, purulent ear discharge, a fever, parotid gland swelling, and trismus. Examination reveals a swollen external canal with exposed cartilage and temporal bone. Cranial nerve palsy may occur. Otitis media (acute).Otitis media is middle ear inflammation that may be serous or suppurative. Acute serous otitis media may cause a feeling of fullness in the ear, hearing loss, and a vague sensation of top-heaviness. The eardrum may be slightly retracted, amber, and marked by air bubbles and a meniscus, or it may be blue-black from hemorrhage. Severe, deep, throbbing ear pain; hearing loss; and a fever that may reach 102° F (38.9° C) characterize acute suppurative otitis media. The pain increases steadily over several hours or days and may be aggravated by pressure on the mastoid antrum. Perforation of the eardrum is possible. Before rupture, the eardrum appears bulging and fiery red. Rupture causes purulent drainage and relieves the pain. Chronic otitis media usually isn't painful except during exacerbations. Persistent pain and discharge from the ear suggest osteomyelitis of the skull base or cancer.
Source: Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Anthrax, cutaneous.The patient with cutaneous anthrax may experience a fever along with lymphadenopathy, malaise, and a headache. After the bacterium Bacillus anthracis enters a cut or abrasion on the skin, the infection begins as a small, painless, or pruritic macular or papular lesion resembling an insect bite. Within 1 to 2 days, the lesion develops into a vesicle and then into a painless ulcer with a characteristic black, necrotic center.
Anthrax, GI.Following the ingestion of contaminated meat from an animal infected with the bacterium B. anthracis, the patient experiences a fever, a loss of appetite, nausea, and vomiting. The patient may also experience abdominal pain, severe bloody diarrhea, and hematemesis.
Anthrax, inhalation.The initial signs and symptoms of inhalation anthrax are flulike, including a fever, chills, weakness, a cough, and chest pain. The disease generally occurs in two stages, with a period of recovery after the initial symptoms. The second stage develops abruptly with rapid deterioration marked by a fever, dyspnea, stridor, and hypotension, generally leading to death within 24 hours.
Avian influenza.Fever is commonly an initial symptom of avian influenza along with other conventional influenza symptoms, such as muscle aches, sore throat, and cough. Individuals infected with the most virulent avian virus, influenza A (H5N1), may develop pneumonia, acute respiratory distress, and other life-threatening complications.
Escherichia coli O157:H7. A fever, bloody diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, and abdominal cramps occur after eating undercooked beef or other foods contaminated with this strain of bacteria. In children younger than age 5 and in elderly patients, hemolytic uremic syndrome may develop (in which the red blood cells are destroyed), and this may ultimately lead to acute renal failure.
Immune complex dysfunction.With immune complex dysfunction, a fever, when present, usually remains low, although moderate elevations may accompany erythema multiforme. Fever may be remittent or intermittent, as in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) or systemic lupus erythematosus, or sustained, as in polyarteritis. As one of several vague, prodromal complaints (such as fatigue, anorexia, and weight loss), a fever produces nocturnal diaphoresis and accompanies such associated signs and symptoms as diarrhea and a persistent cough (with AIDS) or morning stiffness (with rheumatoid arthritis). Other disease-specific findings include a headache and vision loss (temporal arteritis); pain and stiffness in the neck, shoulders, back, or pelvis (ankylosing spondylitis and polymyalgia rheumatica); skin and mucous membrane lesions (erythema multiforme); and urethritis with urethral discharge and conjunctivitis (Reiter's syndrome).
Infectious and inflammatory disorders.With these disorders fever ranges from low (in patients with Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis) to extremely high (in those with bacterial pneumonia, necrotizing fasciitis, or Ebola or Hantavirus). It may be remittent, as in those with infectious mononucleosis or otitis media; hectic (recurring daily with sweating, chills, and flushing), as in those with lung abscess, influenza, or endocarditis; sustained, as in those with meningitis; or relapsing, as in those with malaria. A fever may arise abruptly, as in those with toxic shock syndrome or Rocky Mountain spotted fever, or insidiously, as in those with mycoplasmal pneumonia. In patients with hepatitis, a fever may represent a disease prodrome; in those with appendicitis, it follows the acute stage. Its sudden late appearance with tachycardia, tachypnea, and confusion heralds life-threatening septic shock in patients with peritonitis or gram-negative bacteremia.
Associated signs and symptoms involve every body system. The cyclic variations of hectic fever typically produce alternating chills and diaphoresis. General systemic complaints include weakness, anorexia, and malaise.
Kawasaki syndrome.Fever, typically high and spiking, is the primary characteristic of this acute illness. The diagnosis of Kawasaki syndrome is confirmed when fever persists for 5 or more days (or until administration of I.V. gamma globulin if given before the fifth day) and is accompanied by other clinical signs, including conjunctival injection, erythema, lymphadenopathy, and peripheral extremity swelling. This syndrome occurs worldwide, with the highest incidence in Japan. It primarily affects children under age 5, is more prevalent in boys, and can cause serious heart damage and death without prompt treatment with I.V. gamma globulin.
Listeriosis.Signs and symptoms of listeriosis include a fever, myalgia, abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. If the infection spreads to the nervous system, meningitis may develop; symptoms include a fever, a headache, nuchal rigidity, and a change in the LOC.
Monkeypox.Fever is one of the initial symptoms that occurs in almost all patients infected with this rare viral disease. A papular rash that may be localized or generalized appears within 1 to 3 days after the fever begins. Additional symptoms commonly include sore throat, chills, and lymphadenopathy. No treatment is available for monkeypox, but the disease is rarely fatal in developed countries and usually lasts 2 to 4 weeks.
Neoplasms.Primary neoplasms and metastasis can produce a prolonged fever of varying elevations. For instance, acute leukemia may present insidiously with a low-grade fever, pallor, and bleeding tendencies or more abruptly with a high fever, frank bleeding, and prostration. Occasionally, Hodgkin's disease produces an undulant fever or Pel-Ebstein fever, an irregularly relapsing fever.
In addition to a fever and nocturnal diaphoresis, neoplastic disease typically causes anorexia, fatigue, malaise, and weight loss. Examination may reveal lesions, lymphadenopathy, palpable masses, and hepatosplenomegaly.
Plague (Yersinia pestis).The bubonic form of plague (transmitted to man when bitten by infected fleas) causes a fever, chills, and swollen, inflamed, and tender lymph nodes near the bite site. The septicemic form develops as a fulminant illness generally with the bubonic form. The pneumonic form manifests as a sudden onset of chills, a fever, a headache, and myalgia after person-to-person transmission via the respiratory tract. Other signs and symptoms of the pneumonic form include a productive cough, chest pain, tachypnea, dyspnea, hemoptysis, increasing respiratory distress, and cardiopulmonary insufficiency.
Q fever.Q fever causes a fever, chills, a severe headache, malaise, chest pain, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. The fever may last up to 2 weeks. In severe cases, the patient may develop hepatitis or pneumonia.
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV).Fever is one of the initial symptoms of this common illness that affects most children by age 2. Healthy adults and children older than age 3 usually develop a low-grade fever along with other common coldlike symptoms of runny nose, cough, and wheezing. Many children younger than age 3 have a high-grade fever that may be accompanied by a severe cough, rapid breathing, and high-pitched expiratory wheezing. Infants with RSV typically exhibit lethargy, poor eating, irritability, and difficulty breathing; severe cases may require hospitalization. To avoid repeated RSV infection, individuals should practice infection-control techniques, such as proper hand-washing and avoiding contact with contaminated surfaces.
Rhabdomyolysis.Rhabdomyolysis results in muscle breakdown and release of the muscle cell contents (myoglobin) into the bloodstream, with signs and symptoms that include a fever, muscle weakness or pain, nausea, vomiting, malaise, or dark urine. Acute renal failure is the most commonly reported complication of the disorder. It results from renal structure obstruction and injury during the kidney's attempt to filter myoglobin from the bloodstream.
Rift Valley fever.Typical signs and symptoms of Rift Valley fever include fever, myalgia, weakness, dizziness, and back pain. A small percentage of patients may develop encephalitis or may progress to hemorrhagic fever that can lead to shock and hemorrhage. Inflammation of the retina may result in some permanent vision loss.
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS).SARS generally begins with a fever (usually greater than 100.4° F [38° C]). Other signs and symptoms include a headache, malaise, a dry nonproductive cough, and dyspnea. The severity of the illness is highly variable, ranging from mild illness to pneumonia and, in some cases, progressing to respiratory failure and death.
Smallpox (variola major).Initial signs and symptoms of smallpoxinclude a high fever, malaise, prostration, a severe headache, a backache, and abdominal pain. A maculopapular rash develops on the mucosa of the mouth, pharynx, face, and forearms and then spreads to the trunk and legs. Within 2 days, the rash becomes vesicular and later pustular. The lesions develop at the same time, appear identical, and are more prominent on the face and extremities. The pustules are round, firm, and deeply embedded in the skin. After 8 to 9 days, the pustules form a crust, and later the scab separates from the skin, leaving a pitted scar. In fatal cases, death results from encephalitis, extensive bleeding, or secondary infection.
Thermoregulatory dysfunction.Thermoregulatory dysfunction is marked by a sudden onset of fever that rises rapidly and remains as high as 107° F (41.7° C). It occurs in such life-threatening disorders as heatstroke, thyroid storm, neuroleptic malignant syndrome, and malignant hyperthermia and in lesions of the central nervous system (CNS). A low or moderate fever appears in dehydrated patients.
A prolonged high fever commonly produces vomiting, anhidrosis, a decreased LOC, and hot, flushed skin. Related cardiovascular effects may include tachycardia, tachypnea, and hypotension. Other disease-specific findings include skin changes, such as dry skin and mucous membranes, poor skin turgor, and oliguria with dehydration; mottled cyanosis with malignant hyperthermia; diarrhea with thyroid storm; and ominous signs of increased intracranial pressure (a decreased LOC with bradycardia, a widened pulse pressure, and an increased systolic pressure) with CNS tumor, trauma, or hemorrhage.
Tularemia.Tularemia, also known as rabbit fever, causes an abrupt onset of a fever, chills, a headache, generalized myalgia, a nonproductive cough, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and empyema.
Typhus.Typhus is a rickettsial disease in which the patient initially experiences a headache, myalgia, arthralgia, and malaise. These signs and symptoms are followed by an abrupt onset of a fever, chills, nausea, and vomiting. A maculopapular rash may be present in some cases.
West Nile encephalitis.Signs and symptoms of West Nile encephalitis include fever, headache, and body aches, usually with a skin rash and swollen lymph glands. More severe infection is marked by a high fever, headache, neck stiffness, stupor, disorientation, coma, tremors, occasional seizures, paralysis and, rarely, death.
Diagnostic tests.Immediate or delayed fever uncommonly follows radiographic tests that use contrast medium.
Drugs.A fever and rash commonly result from hypersensitivity to antifungals, sulfonamides, penicillins, cephalosporins, tetracyclines, barbiturates, phenytoin, quinidine, iodides, phenolphthalein, methyldopa, procainamide, and some antitoxins. A fever can accompany chemotherapy, especially with bleomycin, vincristine, and asparaginase. It can result from drugs that impair sweating, such as anticholinergics, phenothiazines, and monoamine oxidase inhibitors. A drug-induced fever typically disappears after the involved drug is discontinued. A fever can also stem from toxic doses of salicylates, amphetamines, and tricyclic antidepressants.
Inhaled anesthetics and muscle relaxants can trigger malignant hyperthermia in patients with this inherited trait.
Treatments.Remittent or intermittent low fever may occur for several days after surgery. Transfusion reactions characteristically produce an abrupt onset of a fever and chills.
Source: Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms, 2007
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Colorado tick fever:
Causes and incidence
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
Lassa fever:
Causes and incidence
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
Relapsing fever:
Causes and incidence
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
Rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease:
Causes and incidence
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
Rocky Mountain spotted fever:
Causes and incidence
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
Whooping cough:
Causes and incidence
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
Cough, barking:
Medical causes
(Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition))
Aspiration of foreign body
Epiglottiditis
Laryngotracheobronchitis (acute)
Spasmodic croup
Cough, productive:
Medical causes
(Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition))
Actinomycosis
Aspiration pneumonitis
Asthma (acute)
Bronchiectasis
Bronchitis (chronic)
Chemical pneumonitis
Common cold
Emphysema
Legionnaires’ disease
Lung abscess (ruptured)
Lung cancer
Nocardiosis
North American blastomycosis
Plague
Pneumonia
Psittacosis
Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis
Pulmonary edema
Pulmonary embolism
Pulmonary tuberculosis
Silicosis
Tracheobronchitis
Other causes
Diagnostic tests
Drugs
Respiratory therapy
Cold intolerance:
Medical causes
(Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition))
Hypopituitarism
Hypothalamic lesion
Hypothyroidism
Cough, nonproductive:
Medical causes
(Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition))
Airway occlusion
Anthrax (inhalation)
Aortic aneurysm (thoracic)
Asthma
Atelectasis
Avian influenza
Bronchitis (chronic)
Bronchogenic carcinoma
Common cold
Esophageal achalasia
Esophageal diverticula
Esophageal occlusion
Esophagitis with reflux
Hodgkin’s disease
Hypersensitivity pneumonitis
Interstitial lung disease
Laryngeal tumor
Laryngitis
Legionnaires’ disease
Lung abscess
Mediastinal tumor
Pericardial effusion
Pleural effusion
Pneumonia
Pneumothorax
Psittacosis
Pulmonary edema
Pulmonary embolism
Sarcoidosis
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)
Sinusitis (chronic)
Tracheobronchitis (acute)
Tularemia
Other causes
Diagnostic tests
Drugs
Treatments
Earache [Otalgia]:
Medical causes
(Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition))
Abscess (extradural)
Barotrauma (acute)
Cerumen impaction
Chondrodermatitis nodularis chronica
Ear canal obstruction by an insect
Frostbite
Furunculosis
Herpes zoster oticus (Ramsay Hunt syndrome)
Keratosis obturans
Mastoiditis (acute)
Ménière’s disease
Middle ear tumor
Myringitis bullosa
Otitis externa
Otitis media (acute)
Perichondritis
Petrositis
Temporomandibular joint infection
Fever [Pyrexia]:
Medical causes
(Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition))
Anthrax, cutaneous
Anthrax, GI
Anthrax, inhalation
Avian influenza
Escherichia Coli O157:H7
Immune complex dysfunction
Infectious and inflammatory disorders
Kawasaki syndrome
Listeriosis
Monkeypox
Neoplasms
Plague
Q fever
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)
Rhabdomyolysis
Rift Valley fever
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)
Smallpox (variola major)
Thermoregulatory dysfunction
Tularemia
Typhus
West Nile encephalitis
Other causes
Diagnostic tests
Drugs
Treatments
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Differential Overview
(Field Guide to Bedside Diagnosis)
Fever of Unknown Origin:
Differential Overview
(Field Guide to Bedside Diagnosis)
Acute Cough:
Differential Overview
(Field Guide to Bedside Diagnosis)
Chronic Cough:
Differential Overview
(Field Guide to Bedside Diagnosis)
Common cold:
Causes
(Handbook of Diseases)
Cold injuries:
Causes
(Handbook of Diseases)
Frostbite
Hypothermia
Rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease:
Causes
(Handbook of Diseases)
Cough, barking:
Medical causes
(Alarming Signs and Symptoms: Lippincott Manual of Nursing Practice Series)
Epiglottiditis.
Epiglottiditis is a life-threatening disorder that has become less common since the use of influenza vaccines. It occurs nocturnally, heralded by a barking cough and high fever. The child is hoarse, dysphagic, dyspneic, and restless and appears extremely ill and panicky. The cough may progress to severe respiratory distress with sternal and intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, cyanosis, and tachycardia. The child will struggle to get sufficient air as epiglottic edema increases. Epiglottiditis is a true medical emergency.
Also known as viral croup, laryngotracheobronchitis is most common in children between ages 9 and 18 months and usually occurs in the fall and early winter. It initially produces low to moderate fever, runny nose, poor appetite, and infrequent cough. When the infection descends into the laryngotracheal area, barking cough, hoarseness, and inspiratory stridor occur.
Spasmodic croup.
Acute spasmodic croup usually occurs during sleep with the abrupt onset of a barking cough that awakens the child. Typically, he doesn’t have fever but may be hoarse, restless, and dyspneic. As his respiratory distress worsens, the child may exhibit sternal and intercostal retractions, nasal flaring, tachycardia, cyanosis, and an anxious, frantic appearance. The signs usually subside within a few hours, but attacks tend to recur.
Cough, productive:
Medical causes
(Alarming Signs and Symptoms: Lippincott Manual of Nursing Practice Series)
Common cold.
When the common cold causes productive coughing, the sputum is mucoid or mucopurulent. Early indications of the common cold include a dry, hacking cough, sneezing, headache, malaise, fatigue, rhinorrhea (watery to tenacious mucopurulent secretions), nasal congestion, sore throat, myalgia, and arthralgia.
Legionnaires’ disease causes a cough that produces scant mucoid, nonpurulent, and possibly blood-streaked sputum. Prodromal signs and symptoms typically include malaise, fatigue, weakness, anorexia, diffuse myalgia and, possibly, diarrhea. Then, within 48 hours, the patient develops a dry cough and sudden high fever with chills. Many patients also have pleuritic chest pain, headache, tachypnea, tachycardia, nausea, vomiting, dyspnea, crackles, mild temporary amnesia, disorientation, confusion, flushing, mild diaphoresis, and prostration.
The cardinal sign of ruptured lung abscess is coughing that produces copious amounts of purulent, foul-smelling, and possibly blood-tinged sputum. A ruptured abscess can also cause diaphoresis, anorexia, clubbing, weight loss, weakness, fatigue, fever with chills, dyspnea, headache, malaise, pleuritic chest pain, halitosis, inspiratory crackles, and tubular or amphoric breath sounds. The patient’s chest is dull on percussion on the affected side.
One of the earliest signs of bronchogenic carcinoma is a chronic cough that produces small amounts of purulent (or mucopurulent), blood-streaked sputum. In a patient with bronchoalveolar cancer, however, coughing produces large amounts of frothy sputum. Other signs and symptoms include dyspnea, anorexia, fatigue, weight loss, chest pain, fever, diaphoresis, wheezing, and clubbing.
Nocardiosis.
Nocardiosis causes a productive cough with purulent, thick, tenacious, and possibly blood-tinged sputum and fever that may last several months. Other findings include night sweats, pleuritic pain, anorexia, malaise, fatigue, weight loss, and diminished or absent breath sounds. The patient’s chest is dull on percussion.
North American blastomycosis.
With North American blastomycosis — a chronic disorder — coughing is dry and hacking, or produces bloody or purulent sputum. Other findings include pleuritic chest pain, fever, chills, anorexia, weight loss, malaise, fatigue, night sweats, cutaneous lesions (small, painless, nonpruritic macules or papules), and prostration.
Plague is an acute bacterial infection caused by Yersinia pestis. It’s one of the most virulent infections and, if untreated, one of the most potentially lethal diseases known. Most cases are sporadic, but the potential for epidemic spread still exists. Clinical forms include bubonic (the most common), septicemic, and pneumonic plagues. The bubonic form is transmitted to man when bitten by infected fleas. Signs and symptoms include fever, chills, and swollen, inflamed, and tender lymph nodes near the site of the fleabite. Septicemic plague develops as a fulminant illness generally with the bubonic form. The pneumonic form may be contracted from person-to-person through direct contact via the respiratory system or through biological warfare from aerosolization and inhalation of the organism. The onset is usually sudden with chills, fever, headache, and myalgia. Pulmonary signs and symptoms include productive cough, chest pain, tachypnea, dyspnea, hemoptysis, increasing respiratory distress, and cardiopulmonary insufficiency.
Pneumonia.
Bacterial pneumonia initially produces a dry cough that becomes productive. Associated signs and symptoms develop suddenly and include shaking chills, high fever, myalgia, headache, pleuritic chest pain that increases with chest movement, tachypnea, tachycardia, dyspnea, cyanosis, diaphoresis, decreased breath sounds, fine crackles, and rhonchi.
Psittacosis.
As psittacosis progresses, the characteristic hacking cough, nonproductive at first, may later produce a small amount of mucoid, blood-streaked sputum. The infection may begin abruptly, with chills, fever, headache, myalgia, and prostration. Other signs and symptoms include tachypnea, fine crackles, chest pain (rare), epistaxis, photophobia, abdominal distention and tenderness, nausea, vomiting, and a faint macular rash. Severe infection may produce stupor, delirium, and coma.
Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis.
Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis causes a nonproductive or slightly productive cough with fever, occasional chills, pleuritic chest pain, sore throat, headache, backache, malaise, marked weakness, anorexia, hemoptysis, and an itchy macular rash. Rhonchi and wheezing may be heard. The disease may spread to other areas, causing arthralgia, swelling of the knees and ankles, and erythema nodosum or erythema multiforme.
When severe, pulmonary edema — a life-threatening disorder — causes a cough that produces frothy, bloody sputum. Early signs and symptoms include exertional dyspnea as well as paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, followed by orthopnea. Coughing may be nonproductive initially. Other signs and symptoms include fever, fatigue, tachycardia, tachypnea, dependent crackles, and ventricular gallop. As the patient’s respirations become increasingly rapid and labored, he develops more diffuse crackles and productive cough, worsening tachycardia and, possibly, arrhythmias. The patient’s skin becomes cold, clammy, and cyanotic, his blood pressure falls, and his pulse becomes thready.
Pulmonary embolism.
Pulmonary embolism is a life-threatening disorder that causes a cough that may be nonproductive or may produce blood-tinged sputum. Usually, the first symptom of pulmonary embolism is severe dyspnea, which may be accompanied by angina or pleuritic chest pain. The patient experiences marked anxiety, low-grade fever, tachycardia, tachypnea, and diaphoresis. Less-common signs include massive hemoptysis, chest splinting, leg edema and, with a large embolus, cyanosis, syncope, and jugular vein distention. The patient may also have pleural friction rub, diffuse wheezing, crackles, chest dullness on percussion, decreased breath sounds, and signs of circulatory collapse.
Pulmonary emphysema.
Pulmonary emphysema causes a chronic productive cough with scant, mucoid, translucent, grayish white sputum that can become mucopurulent. The patient is thin and has the characteristic “pink puffer” appearance with weight loss, increased accessory muscle use, tachypnea, grunting expirations through pursed lips, diminished breath sounds, exertional dyspnea, rhonchi, barrel chest, and anorexia. Clubbing is a late sign.
Pulmonary tuberculosis.
Pulmonary tuberculosis causes a mild to severe productive cough along with some combination of hemoptysis, malaise, dyspnea, and pleuritic chest pain. Sputum may be scant and mucoid or copious and purulent. Typically, the patient experiences night sweats, easy fatigability, and weight loss. His breath sounds are amphoric. He may have chest dullness on percussion and, after coughing, increased tactile fremitus with crackles.
Silicosis.
A productive cough with mucopurulent sputum is the earliest sign of silicosis. The patient also has exertional dyspnea, tachypnea, weight loss, fatigue, general weakness, and recurrent respiratory infections. Auscultation reveals end-inspiratory, fine crackles at the lung bases.
Inflammation initially causes a nonproductive cough that later — following the onset of chills, sore throat, slight fever, muscle and back pain, and substernal tightness — becomes productive as secretions increase. Sputum is mucoid, mucopurulent, or purulent. The patient typically has rhonchi and wheezes; he may also develop crackles. Severe tracheobronchitis may cause a fever of 101° to 102° F (38.3° to 38.9° C) and bronchospasm.
Other causes
Bronchoscopy and pulmonary function tests may increase productive coughing.
Drugs.
Expectorants, of course, increase productive coughing. These include ammonium chloride, calcium iodide, guaifenesin, iodinated glycerol, potassium iodide, and terpin hydrate.
Intermittent positive-pressure breathing, nebulizer therapy, and incentive spirometry can help loosen secretions and cause or increase productive coughing.
Fever:
Medical causes
(Alarming Signs and Symptoms: Lippincott Manual of Nursing Practice Series)
Anthrax, cutaneous
The patient may experience a fever along with lymphadenopathy, malaise, and headache. After the bacterium Bacillus anthracis enters a cut or abrasion on the skin, the infection begins as a small, painless or pruritic macular or papular lesion resembling an insect bite. Within 1 to 2 days, the lesion develops into a vesicle and then into a painless ulcer with a characteristic black, necrotic center.
Anthrax, GI
Following the ingestion of contaminated meat from an animal infected with the bacterium Bacillus anthracis, the patient experiences fever, loss of appetite, nausea, and vomiting. The patient may also experience abdominal pain, severe bloody diarrhea, and hematemesis.
Anthrax, inhalation
Immune complex dysfunction
When present, fever usually remains low, although moderate elevations may accompany erythema multiforme. Fever may be remittent or intermittent, as in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) or systemic lupus erythematosus, or sustained, as in polyarteritis. As one of several vague, prodromal complaints (such as fatigue, anorexia, and weight loss), fever produces nocturnal diaphoresis and accompanies such associated signs and symptoms as diarrhea and a persistent cough (with AIDS) or morning stiffness (with rheumatoid arthritis). Other disease-specific findings include headache and vision loss (temporal arteritis); pain and stiffness in the neck, shoulders, back, or pelvis (ankylosing spondylitis and polymyalgia rheumatica); skin and mucous membrane lesions (erythema multiforme); and urethritis with urethral discharge and conjunctivitis (Reiter’s syndrome).
Infectious and inflammatory disorders
Fever ranges from low (in patients with Crohn’s disease or ulcerative colitis) to extremely high (in those with bacterial pneumonia, necrotizing fasciitis, or Ebola or Hantavirus). It may be remittent, as in those with infectious mononucleosis or otitis media; hectic (recurring daily with sweating, chills, and flushing), as in those with lung abscess, influenza, or endocarditis; sustained, as in those with meningitis; or relapsing, as in those with malaria. Fever may arise abruptly, as in those with toxic shock syndrome or Rocky Mountain spotted fever, or insidiously, as in those with mycoplasmal pneumonia. In patients with hepatitis, fever may represent a disease prodrome; in those with appendicitis, it follows the acute stage. Its sudden late appearance with tachycardia, tachypnea, and confusion heralds life-threatening septic shock in patients with peritonitis or gram-negative bacteremia.
Listeriosis
Signs and symptoms of listeriosis include fever, myalgias, abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. If the infection spreads to the nervous system, meningitis may develop; symptoms include fever, headache, nuchal rigidity, and change in level of consciousness.
Neoplasms
Plague (Yersinia pestis)
The bubonic form of plague (transmitted to patient when bitten by infected fleas) causes fever, chills, and swollen, inflamed, and tender lymph nodes near the site of the bite. The septicemic form develops as a fulminant illness generally with the bubonic form. The pneumonic form manifests as a sudden onset of chills, fever, headache, and myalgias after person-to-person transmission via the respiratory tract. Other signs and symptoms of the pneumonic form include productive cough, chest pain, tachypnea, dyspnea, hemoptysis, increasing respiratory distress, and cardiopulmonary insufficiency.
Q fever
Q fever is a rickettsial disease that’s caused by the infection of Coxiella burnetii causes fever, chills, severe headache, malaise, chest pain, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. Fever may last up to 2 weeks. In severe cases, the patient may develop hepatitis or pneumonia.
Rhabdomyolysis
Rift Valley fever
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)
SARS is an acute infectious disease caused by a coronavirus called SARS-associated coronavirus (SARS-CoV). Although most cases have been reported in Asia (China, Vietnam, Singapore, Thailand), cases have cropped up in Europe and North America. The incubation period is 2 to 7 days, and the illness generally begins with a fever (usually greater than 100.4° F [38° C]). Other symptoms include headache, malaise, a dry nonproductive cough, and dyspnea. The severity of the illness is highly variable, ranging from mild illness to pneumonia and, in some cases, progressing to respiratory failure and death.
Smallpox (variola major)
Initial signs and symptoms of smallpox include high fever, malaise, prostration, severe headache, backache, and abdominal pain. A maculopapular rash develops on the mucosa of the mouth, pharynx, face, and forearms and then spreads to the trunk and legs. Within 2 days, the rash becomes vesicular and later pustular. The lesions develop at the same time, appear identical, and are more prominent on the face and extremities. The pustules are round, firm, and deeply embedded in the skin. After about 8 to 9 days, the pustules form a crust, and later the scab separates from the skin, leaving a pitted scar. In fatal cases, death results from encephalitis, extensive bleeding, or secondary infection.
Thermoregulatory dysfunction
Sudden onset of fever that rises rapidly and remains as high as 107° F (41.7° C) occurs in life-threatening disorders, such as heatstroke, thyroid storm, neuroleptic malignant syndrome, and malignant hyperthermia, and in lesions of the central nervous system (CNS). Low or moderate fever appears in dehydrated patients.
Tularemia
Tularemia, also known as rabbit fever, is an infectious disease that causes abrupt onset of fever, chills, headache, generalized myalgias, nonproductive cough, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and empyema.
Typhus
With typhus — a rickettsial disease — the patient initially experiences headache, myalgia, arthralgia, and malaise. These signs and symptoms are followed by an abrupt onset of fever, chills, nausea, and vomiting. A maculopapular rash may be present in some cases.
West Nile encephalitis
A brain infection caused by West Nile virus, the mosquito-borne flavivirus is commonly found in Africa, West Asia, the Middle East and, rarely, in North America. Mild infection is common; signs and symptoms include fever, headache, and body aches, often with skin rash and swollen lymph glands. More severe infection is marked by high fever, headache, neck stiffness, stupor, disorientation, coma, tremors, occasional convulsions, paralysis and, rarely, death.
Other causes
Diagnostic tests
Immediate or delayed fever infrequently follows radiographic tests that use contrast medium.
Drugs
Medical treatments
Remittent or intermittent low fever may occur for several days after surgery. Transfusion reactions characteristically produce abrupt onset of fever and chills.
Cough, barking:
Medical causes
(Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses)
Aspiration of foreign body
Epiglottiditis
Laryngotracheobronchitis (acute)
Spasmodic croup
Cough, productive:
Medical causes
(Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses)
Aspiration pneumonitis
Asthma (acute)
Bronchiectasis
Bronchitis (chronic)
Chemical pneumonitis
Common cold
Legionnaires’ disease
Lung abscess (ruptured)
Lung cancer
Plague
Pneumonia
Pulmonary edema
Pulmonary embolism
Pulmonary emphysema
Pulmonary tuberculosis
Silicosis
Tracheobronchitis
Other causes
Diagnostic tests
Drugs
Respiratory therapy
Earache:
Medical causes
(Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses)
Abscess (extradural)
Barotrauma (acute)
Cerumen impaction
Chondrodermatitis nodularis chronica
Frostbite
Furunculosis
Herpes zoster oticus
Mastoiditis (acute)
Ménière’s disease
Middle ear tumor
Otitis externa (acute)
Otitis media (acute)
Petrositis
Temporomandibular joint infection
Fever:
Medical causes
(Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses)
Anthrax, cutaneous
Anthrax, GI
Anthrax, inhalation
Escherichia coli
Immune complex dysfunction
Infectious and inflammatory disorders
Neoplasms
Plague
Rhabdomyolysis
Severe acute respiratory syndrome
Smallpox
Thermoregulatory dysfunction
Tularemia
West Nile encephalitis
Other causes
Drugs
Cough, nonproductive:
Medical causes
(Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses)
Airway occlusion
Anthrax (inhalation)
Aortic aneurysm (thoracic)
Asthma
Atelectasis
Bronchitis (chronic)
Bronchogenic carcinoma
Common cold
Esophageal achalasia
Esophageal diverticula
Esophageal occlusion
Esophagitis with reflux
Hodgkin’s disease
Hypersensitivity pneumonitis
Interstitial lung disease
Laryngeal tumor
Laryngitis
Legionnaires’ disease
Lung abscess
Mediastinal tumor
Pleural effusion
Pneumonia
Pneumothorax
Pulmonary edema
Pulmonary embolism
Sarcoidosis
Severe acute respiratory syndrome
Sinusitis (chronic)
Tracheobronchitis (acute)
Tularemia
Other causes
Diagnostic tests
Treatments
Cough:
Principal Causes of Cough
(The Diagnostic Approach to Symptoms and Signs in Pediatrics)
Earache:
Principal Causes of Earache
(The Diagnostic Approach to Symptoms and Signs in Pediatrics)
Fever:
Principal Causes of Acute Fever
(The Diagnostic Approach to Symptoms and Signs in Pediatrics)
Sore Throat:
Principal Causes of Sore Throat
(The Diagnostic Approach to Symptoms and Signs in Pediatrics)
Cough, barking:
Medical causes
(Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms)
Cough, productive:
Medical causes
(Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms)
Other causes
Cough, nonproductive:
Medical causes
(Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms)
Other causes
Earache [Otalgia]:
Medical causes
(Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms)
Fever [Pyrexia]:
Medical causes
(Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms)
Other causes
» Next page: Risk Factors for Common cold
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