Other Causes of Fever



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T e c h n i c a l S e m i n a r s Other Causes of Fever Febrile Illness Causes Fever After Seven Days Referral Relapsing Fever - Borreliosis Overview JHR Adaptation Sore Throat Overview Prevention Management Treatment Adaptation Dengue Fever Overview Referral Treatment Plan and Adaptation

Febrile Illness Causes Fever as a secondary cause management of the condition results in management of the fever pneumonia, measles, dysentery, ear infections, runny nose Fever associated with severe illnesses which use danger signs for classification and treatment meningitis, septicemia sepsis

Febrile Illness Causes Fever associated with malaria, the main focus of IMCI Guidelines difficult to distinguish malaria from other common causes of infection without extensive clinical examination and laboratory testing malaria covered in a separate seminar

Febrile Illness Causes Non-localizing signs do not allow for distinction at a first-level health facility Danger signs identify a seriously ill child who needs to be referred Peritonsillar abscess Typhoid Relapsing Fever Dengue

Fever after Seven Days Referral Differentiates between simple viral fevers and other diseases where the only presenting symptom is fever Detects conditions needing diagnostic and therapeutic intervention Tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, urinary tract infection, relapsing fever, typhoid, osteomyelitis

Referral Fever after Seven Days Conditions do not have any obvious simple clinical sign but have fever in common Prevalence too low to include specific signs and symptoms for each condition

Overview Recurrent attacks of fever lasting three to five days that relapse and remit Caused by a spirochete of the Borrelia species and transmitted by lice and soft body ticks Symptoms Relapsing Fever - Borreliosis chills, severe muscle pain, headache, joint pain, petechiae, stiff neck, jaundice, hepatosplenomegaly, abdominal tenderness All signs less clear in children under 5 years Mortality 70% if untreated; 5% or less if

Relapsing Fever - Borreliosis Jarisch-Herxheimer Reaction (JHR) Treatment for relapsing fever is relatively simple Most mortality in treated patients due to the JHR occurs within the first one or two hours after the first antibiotic dose caused by the release of TNF and cytokines caused by lysis of the spirochete characterized by high fever chills and aggravation of existing symptoms, tachypnea, vasoconstriction, high blood pressure, shock Observe patients for several hours after i i h fi d f ibi i

Relapsing Fever - Borreliosis Jarisch-Herxheimer Reaction (JHR) Tetracycline effective, but associated with 45 percent rate of JHR and case fatality rate of 5 percent Low dose procaine penicillin results in a 5 percent JHR rate with no case fatality, but a high rate of relapses Regime % JHR % Relapses C.F.R.% Tetracycline 45 0 5 Low dose P.P. 5 >45 0 High dose P.P. 30 Low 5

Relapsing Fever - Borreliosis Jarisch-Herxheimer Reaction (JHR) Antimicrobial treatment alone is not sufficient delouse, boil personal clothes, burn blankets, shave head, and spray dwelling

Adaptation Relapsing Fever - Borreliosis High risk malaria - suspect relapsing fever in all children with persistent fever or remission/relapse pattern. Low or no risk malaria - treat on suspicion in known relapsing fever situation as other cause of fever" or in follow up.

Adaptation Relapsing Fever - Borreliosis Suspect relapsing fever if other cases are occurring and the child has high fever with chills and headache. Treat with procaine penicillin. Adapt guidelines to include counselling mother on personal hygiene and delousing. Add procaine penicillin box to guidelines.

Overview Sore Throat Streptococcal sore throat and rheumatic fever predominately in children older than 5 years IMCI Guidelines don t address the child over 5 years Main reason to treat streptococcal sore throat is prevention of rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease Rheumatic heart disease accounts for 1.1 percent of deaths in developing countries Ghana study in 1981-1% of healthy days of life lost due to RHD

Sore Throat Prevention WHO recommends secondary prevention of rheumatic heart disease Does not prevent RHF but prevents its progression Prophylactic benzathine penicillin every 3 to 4 weeks to children who have had rheumatic fever Ideal prevention of rheumatic fever entails treatment with streptococcal pharyngitis with penicillin Limited use in developing countries because of expense Directed at school-age children and of little use to children under 5

Management issues Sore Throat Management of sore throat is complicated by many factors 30-50% of RHF follows unapparent infection 15-20% sore throats are Group A Streptococcus and reliable signs are needed to avoid overtreatment Selection of signs to use remains problematic Children under 3 often have non-specific signs such as fever and crusts around nose GAS infections generally rare in children under 2 years

Management issues Sore Throat Sensitivity and specificity tend to move in opposite directions Difficult clinical diagnosis of GAS infection without rapid diagnostic test or routine culture Clinical feature Sensitivity % Specificity % History of fever 14.4 92.3 Temp >38ºC 37.4 66.0 Exudate 31.0 31.0 Enlarged node 81.3 45.1

Management issues Sore Throat High prevalence RHF or RHD - high sensitivity is better Low prevalence - high specificity is better to prevent over-treatment

Treatment options Sore Throat Treatment to prevent RHF and RHD, but also reduces duration of symptoms and signs, and anorexia Single dose of IM Benzathine penicillin remains best treatment levels of penicillin remain elevated for up to 10 days can prevent a sore throat developing for up to 21 days later administration can be very painful and incorrect administration can cause sterile abscesses, sciatic nerve injury Penicillin V or amoxicillin are alternatives but more expensive and 10-day compliance is poor

Sore Throat Adaptation Sore throat is common, but not a major cause of mortality Treatment (injection of benzathine penicillin) is expensive Lack of reliable clinical signs leads to over-treatment of sore throats

Sore Throat Adaptation Possible adaptation depends on: prevalence of GAS sore throat sensitivity and specificity of the signs and symptoms being considered Option to use the ARI box as is and accept low sensitivity but should not be used on younger children

Overview Dengue Fever Problem in Asia and becoming a significant problem in Latin America and east Africa Presents as shock or bleeding, occurs in epidemics every 3 to 4 years Major and politically important cause of morbidity in some countries Most common in children 5-15 years but not less than 5 years Untreated, mortality can be up to 10 percent, but when treated effectively, as low as.5 percent

Overview Dengue Fever First-level treatment comprises management of shock and referral Major clinical manifestations Shock -- circulatory failure Hemorrhage Fever (with or without hepatomegaly that is tender) Selection of signs for the algorithm depends on Predictive value Feasibility Types of treatment available

Referral Signs and symptoms needing referral Shock Dengue Fever Cold clammy extremities, severe bleeding from nose or gums, black vomit or stools (3) Weak or undetectable radial pulse, skin petechiae, frequent vomiting, abdominal pain (2) Capillary refill time >3 seconds, lethargy or restlessness, right upper abdominal tenderness, positive tourniquet test, petechiae plus positive tourniquet test (1) Algorithms from Indonesia, Philippines and Vietnam show great variation in type and number of signs used

Dengue Fever Referral Signs requiring observation Abdominal pain (1) Restless (1) Skin petechiae + negative tourniquet test (1) High continuous fever for 3 days or more (1) No other apparent cause of fever (1) Studies show only shock and mucocutaneous bleeding had specificities and sensitivities over 80 percent Other signs and symptoms add considerably to the complexity of the algorithms

Dengue Fever Treatment Plan and Adaptation Main treatment plans that fit needs of most national guidelines Management of shock - Plan C or modified Management of potential fluid loss - Plan A Observation - watch for any sign of bleeding or worsening Adaptations problematic because of inadequate analysis of data to define best signs and symptoms