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Symptoms » Fever » Diagnosis Checklist
 
Dr. Huntley's

DIAGNOSIS CHECKLIST
for Fever

Questions Your Doctor May Ask - and Why!

During a consultation, your doctor will use various techniques in his assesment of the symptom: Fever. These may include a physical examination or other medical tests. Your doctor may ask several questions when assessing your condition. It is important to remember that your consultation is a two-way process and any extra information you can share with your doctor may help them with their diagnosis.

Some of the questions your doctor may ask are listed below:

  1. How long have you had the fever?

    Why: to determine if acute or chronic.

  2. What is the pattern of the fever?

    Why: e.g. intermittent fever of malaria, Epstein-Barr virus and ascending cholangitis; continuous fever is common with viral infections such as influenza; remittent fever where temperature returns towards normal for a variable period but is always elevated may occur with pelvic abscess, wound infection and cancer; undulant fever where bouts of fever for several days are followed by several days of normal temperature occur with brucellosis infection and lymphomas.

  3. Travel history?

    Why: overseas travelers or visitors may have special or even exotic infections.

  4. Past medical history?

    Why: e.g. AIDS, Rheumatic fever, pneumonia, immunodeficiency, cancer.

  5. Recent surgery?

    Why: may suggest post-operative complication e.g. wound infection, aspiration pneumonia, lung collapse, urinary catheter related urinary tract infection, intra-abdominal abscess.

  6. Medications?

    Why: drugs can cause fever, presumably due to hypersensitivity e.g. allopurinol, antihistamines, barbiturates, cephalosporins, cimetidine, methyl dopa, penicillins, isoniazid, phenytoin, procainamide, salicylates, sulphonamides; some drugs can suppress the immune system and increase risk of infections e.g. cancer chemotherapy agents.

  7. Sexual history?

    Why: may help to determine risk of HIV, hepatitis, syphilis, pelvic inflammatory disease e.g. AIDS patients pose a special risk for infections including opportunistic infections.

Questions your doctor may ask about related symptoms:

Sometimes, other symptoms may be present and may help your doctor analyse your condition. These may include:

  1. Pain and location of the pain?

    Why: can help determine focus of infection e.g. sore throat may indicate streptococcal pharyngitis, viral upper respiratory infection, infectious mononucleosis, leukemia and subacute thyroiditis; headache may indicate meningitis or encephalitis; chest pain may suggest pulmonary infarction, heart attack, Bornholm disease, tuberculosis, pleurisy or empyema; abdominal pain may suggest pyelonephritis, cholecystitis, appendicitis, liver abscess or diverticulitis; joint pain may suggest rheumatic fever, rheumatoid arthritis or septic arthritis; ear ache may suggest middle ear infection or mastoiditis.

  2. Frequency and burning of urine?

    Why: would suggest pyelonephritis, abscess around the kidney or abscess in the prostate.

  3. Cough?

    Why: may suggest pneumonia, lung abscess, bronchiectasis, tuberculosis or chronic fungal disease in the lung.

  4. Bone pain or bone swelling?

    Why: may suggest osteomyelitis.

  5. Body discharge?

    Why: e.g. vaginal, penile, anal, tooth, ear, nasal.

  6. Body rash?

    Why: may help determine cause of fever e.g. drug reaction, meningococcemia, viral illnesses, subacute bacterial endocarditis, secondary syphilis, pemphigus, lupus erythematosus, dermatomyositis, typhoid fever.


 » Next page: Types of Fever

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