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Evaluation of Fever in Infants and Young Children Jennifer L. Hamilton, MD, PhD, FAAFP, Drexel University College of Medicine Sony P. John, MD, Chester County Hospital

Evaluation of Fever in Infants and Young Children

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Evaluation of Fever in Infants and Young Children. Jennifer L. Hamilton, MD, PhD, FAAFP, Drexel University College of Medicine Sony P. John, MD, Chester County Hospital. Fever. In children less then 36 months of age has the potential for serious consequences. Urine Testing. Important! - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Evaluation of Fever in Infants and Young Children

Evaluation of Fever in Infants and Young ChildrenJennifer L. Hamilton, MD, PhD, FAAFP, Drexel University College of MedicineSony P. John, MD, Chester County Hospital

Page 2: Evaluation of Fever in Infants and Young Children

Fever• In children less then 36 months of age has the

potential for serious consequences

Page 3: Evaluation of Fever in Infants and Young Children

Urine Testing• Important!• Higher incidences of Urinary Tract Infections are

occuring in children• UTI’s are the most common source of infection in

children less than 3 months old• UTI’s are the second most common source of

infection in children 3-36 months old (pneumonia is the first)

Page 4: Evaluation of Fever in Infants and Young Children

Signs of serious bacterial infections• Cyanosis• Poor peripheral circulation• Petechial rash• Inconsolability

Page 5: Evaluation of Fever in Infants and Young Children

Define a fever• A clinically significant fever in children younger

than 36 months old is a rectal temperature of 100.4 F or greater

• Axillary, tympanic and temporal artery measurements have been shown to be unreliable.

Page 6: Evaluation of Fever in Infants and Young Children

Neonates (up to 28 days old)• When parents report a clinically significant fever

they may have a serious bacterial infection, even if they do not have a fever at the time of their initial medical evaluation

Page 7: Evaluation of Fever in Infants and Young Children

Teething• Teething is rarely associated with a fever of more

than 100.4 F

Page 8: Evaluation of Fever in Infants and Young Children

History and Physical• The history and physical exam cannot identify all

children with serious bacterial infection• Judicious use of imaging and laboratory testing is

valuable

Page 9: Evaluation of Fever in Infants and Young Children

U Bags• Urine cultures taken from a urinary bag have an

85% false positive rate

Page 10: Evaluation of Fever in Infants and Young Children

Labs• WBC counts and absolute neutrophil counts have

been used to identify serious bacterial infection, including occult bacteremia

Page 11: Evaluation of Fever in Infants and Young Children

Current Guidelines• Complete blood count with differential and blood

cultures for infants 3 months or younger with a fever

Page 12: Evaluation of Fever in Infants and Young Children

Diarrhea• In neonates and young infants, diarrhea with a

fever suggest a systemic illness• Stool culture and fecal WBC counts are

recommended

Page 13: Evaluation of Fever in Infants and Young Children

Lumbar Puncture• LP’s are recommended for all febrile neonates • Infants and children WITH clinical signs of

meningitis should also have an LP

Page 14: Evaluation of Fever in Infants and Young Children

Flu• Children who test positive for influenza are

unlikely to have a coexistent serious bacterial infection

• They still have significant risk for UTI• Patients who test positive for influenza do not

need more invasive testing