0521779407-07 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:10
Fever of Unknown Origin 567
often done; liver biopsy helpful in 5–10% of patients with abnormal
LFTs
■Role of laparoscopy and laparotomy unclear, but should be consid-
ered in rapidly deteriorating patient with negative evaluation
differential diagnosis
■As indicated above
management
■Documentation of fever critical initial step as evaluation long, costly
and potentially invasive
■If suspect factitious fever, observe patient while taking temperature
■Have patient record temperature 3 or 4 times a day for several days
to assess frequency, height and periodicity.
specific therapy
■If specific diagnosis made, therapy directed at underlying cause
■Empiric therapy indicated if a specific diagnosis strongly suspected;
before therapy started, all relevant cultures should be obtained; end-
points should be set prior to therapy – if no clinical response after
several weeks, therapy should be discontinued and re-evaluation
undertaken
■In the rapidly deteriorating patient, empiric therapy indicated:
antituberculous therapy (particularly in the elderly or those from
endemic areas) and broad-spectrum antibiotics reasonable
■Steroids to suppress fever not indicated; infection the most common
cause of FUO, and steroids may allow infections to become more
aggressive or disseminate
follow-up
■In undiagnosed patients, careful and frequent (weekly) follow-up
indicated to assess any new signs or symptoms that may lead to a
diagnosis
complications and prognosis
■Prognosis depends on underlying disease; the elderly and those with
malignancy have less favorable outcome
■Of those undiagnosed after extensive evaluation, 75% eventually
have resolution of symptoms and etiology remains unknown; in the
remainder, more classic signs and symptoms of underlying disease
appear, allowing a specific diagnosis to be made
■Death from FUO is uncommon, occurring in less than 5%.