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Wednesday, June 03, 2015

Fever is a symptom and not a disease, but ...

As I have mentioned in my earlier post, fever is not a disease by itself. Treating it with paracetamol merely causes the fever to subside, without actually affecting the underlying cause of the fever. It is important to know the following additional facts about fever:

  1. High fever can produce fits in infants and toddlers; although these fits look very dangerous to parents and care-takers, they are merely a reflection of the immaturity of a small child's brain and nervous system pathways; no long-term medicine is needed except in the rarest of circumstances.
  2. In children (and adults) of all ages, fever increases the thirst and fluid requirements of the patient; thus, febrile children or adults must be given extra liquids - usually 10% more than the usual for every degree Centigrade the fever is above 38 degrees.
  3. A patient who is running a fever should never be force-fed food; nor should food be withheld from one who desires it. In short, let the patient decide what, how much and in what form he needs. Starving a child with fever is a criminal act, since it further weakens his/her body and prevents it from fighting the underlying cause of the fever (usually an infection with bacteria).
  4. Very high fever (more than 105 degrees Fahrenheit) is termed malignant hyperpyrexia ... and in the extreme case, it can be potentially fatal, i.e. kill the patient due to complete derangement of all systems in the body.
While most causes of fever in children are easy to manage and not life-threatening, fever accompanied by any of the following additional symptoms should be considered as "not just fever" and such children should be referred to a Paediatrician immediately:           
  • High grade fever
  • Uncontrolled or repeated or very large-sized vomiting or loose stools
  • Irritable, excessively jumpy or crying child
  • Older child who remains in bed all the time and refuses to drink liquids or appears inactive, dull or lethargic
  • Has had fever-associated fits in the past, or during the present illness
  • There are significant symptoms pointing to a serious infection such as arching of the back (meningitis), dark coloured, blackish urine (malaria), stomach bloating (typhoid) or moist, hacking cough with sputum and chest pain (pneumonia)
Learn to understand fever and try not to panic.  Check out the link to my earlier detailed post on fever to learn how to manage fever at home. When in doubt, go to your child's doctor immediately.

1 comment:

  1. My son is suffering from fever since evening i hav given crocin drops 2 ml..is the dosage fine?

    ReplyDelete

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