نتایج جستجو برای: fever of unknown origin fuo

تعداد نتایج: 21179510  

Journal: :Revista chilena de pediatria 2017
Alexa Puchi Silva Paulina López Radrigán Montserrat Zapico Lafuente Sergio Tapia Carrere Sergio González Bombardiere

Fever of unknown origin (FUO) is defined as fever over 7 to 10 days without a diagnosis despite a complete initial study. The most frequent causes are infections, autoimmune and tumors. Even though most cases are self-limited there is a minority that has an underlying etiology with an ominous forecast, encouraging a systematized study. OBJECTIVE To report a rare case of a boy who presented fe...

Journal: :American family physician 2003
Alan R Roth Gina M Basello

Fever of unknown origin (FUO) in adults is defined as a temperature higher than 38.3 degrees C (100.9 degrees F) that lasts for more than three weeks with no obvious source despite appropriate investigation. The four categories of potential etiology of FUO are classic, nosocomial, immune deficient, and human immunodeficiency virus-related. The four subgroups of the differential diagnosis of FUO...

Journal: :Clinics in geriatric medicine 2007
Sari Tal Vladimir Guller Alexander Gurevich

Evaluation of elderly patients who have fever of unknown origin (FUO) requires a different perspective from that needed for young patients. Differential diagnosis often varies with age, and presentation of the disease frequently is nonspecific and symptoms difficult to interpret. Noninfectious diseases are the most frequent cause of FUO in the elderly and temporal arteritis the most frequent sp...

Journal: :Egyptian Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine 2022

Abstract Background Fever of unknown origin (FUO) is a challenging clinical problem in medicine that needs collaboration various diagnostic techniques to establish the accurate diagnosis. We evaluated performance 18F-FDG PET/CT patients who presented themselves with FUO. Our study included 40 FUO underwent examination and their results were compared laboratory, histopathological, microbiologica...

Background: Fever of unknown origin (FUO) is a perplexing medical problem. The causes for FUO are more than 200 diseases. The aim of the study was to present human clinical cases of Coxiella burnetii infection debuting as FUO. Methods: The following methods were conducted in the study: literature search, laboratory, imaging, and statistical methods. Criteria of Durack and Street were applied f...

Journal: :The Southeast Asian journal of tropical medicine and public health 2003
Asmah Mohd Emily M L Goh Sook-Khuan Chow Lai-Meng Looi Swan-Sim Yeap

The diagnosis of patients with fever of unknown origin (FUO) is often problematic because the range of possible differential diagnoses is broad. We report on a case in which a patient presented with FUO and was subsequently found to have both a collagen vascular disease and an intercurrent infection. Treatment for the collagen vascular disease with corticosteroids exacerbated the intercurrent i...

Journal: :Caspian journal of internal medicine 2013
Seyed-Mohammad Alavi Mohammad Nadimi Gholam Abbas Zamani

BACKGROUND Although infectious diseases are the most common sources for the fever of unknown origin (FUO), but the spectrum of infectious diseases is changing overtime. The purpose of the study was to define the clinical spectrum and changing the pattern of FUO. METHODS This existing data based study was undertaken from 2007 to 2011. One hundred-six patients fulfilling the modified criteria f...

2013
Sonal Saxena Mayank Dwivedi Priyam Batra Renu Dutta

The prevalence of nalidixic acid-resistant Salmonella Typhi (NARST) infection is increasing worldwide. We are reporting an unusual case of infected haematocolpos presenting as urinary obstruction in a patient with fever of unknown origin (FUO). This case report highlights the importance of quinolone-resistant typhoid fever in the differential diagnosis of any acute febrile illness in countries,...

2012
Luke I. Sonoda Bal Sanghera Gill Vivian Wai Lup Wong

UNLABELLED F-18 FDG PET-CT scanning plays an important role in the management of fever of unknown origin (FUO). Some elderly patients with FUO can be in their terminal stage of life. An elderly woman was referred for a PET-CT scan to find the etiology of FUO. The scan was inconclusive but showed significantly reduced FDG uptake in the brain and heart, despite normal physiological uptake in the ...

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