Title: Fever in the ICU
1Fever in the ICU
- Simranjit Singh Galhotra, MD, MBA
- George Washington University
- Fellow, Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine
- January 1998
2Fever, A Little History
- Hippocrates recognized fever as a beneficial sign
during infection - Thomas Sydenham (1624-1689), English physician
Fever is Natures engine which she brings into
the field to remove her enemy. - Fever therapy used in many societies world-wide
3Fever, Late 1800s
- Liebermeister, German physician
- Fever is the regulation of body temperature at a
higher level - Fever dangerous if too high or prolonged
- Antipyretic drugs should be used only for high
fevers or of long duration
4Fever, Late 1800s
- Antipyretic drugs widely available aspirin,
other salicylates - Many physicians advocated reducing fever
- Fever considered harmful by-product of infection,
not host-defense response - Why? Perhaps because salicylates are analgesic
and antipyretic
5Evolutionary Biology
- Fever is energetically costly
- In mammals increasing temperature 2-3ºC increases
energy consumption 20 - Since such a response is preserved across
invertebrates and vertebrates, fever must have an
adaptive function
6Mechanism of Protective Effect
- Enhanced neutrophil migration
- Increased production of antibacterial substances
by neutrophils - Increased production of interferon
- Increased antiviral and antitumor activity of
interferon - Increased T-cell proliferation
Kluger MJ. Inf Dis Clin of NA 101-20, 1996
7Nosocomial Fevers
- Hospital-acquired fevers occur in one-third of
all medical inpatients - Nosocomial fevers even more common in the ICU
8Fever in the ICU
- ICU patients have several underlying
medical/surgical conditions - ICU patients undergo many invasive diagnostic and
therapeutic procedures - Therefore, fever in ICU patients must be
thoroughly and promptly evaluated to discriminate
infectious from non-infectious etiologies
9Diagnostic Approach
- Fever is a non-specific sign seen in inflammatory
processes that may be - infectious
- noninfectious, including neoplastic
- The 102º Rule
10Temp lt 102º
- Acute cholecystitis
- Acute MI
- Dresslers Syndrome
- Thrombophlebitis
- GI bleed
- Acute pancreatitis
- Pulmonary embolism or infarct
- Viral hepatitis
- Uncomplicated wound infection
11Temp ³ 102º
- Cholangitis
- Suppurative phlebitis
- Pericarditis
- Septic pulmonary embolism
- Pancreatic abscess
- Non-viral liver disease drug fever,
leptospirosis - Complicated wound infection
- Bowel infarction
12Causes of Fever in the ICU
- SIRS
- Intravenous-line infections
- Nosocomial pneumonia
- Nosocomial sinusitis
- Intraabdominal infections
- Urinary catheter-associated bacteriuria
- Drug fever
- Post-operative fever
- Neurosurgical causes
13Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome
- Definition of SIRS
- T gt 38ºC or lt 36ºC
- HR gt 90
- RR gt 20 or pCO2 lt 32
- WBC gt 12 or lt 4
14SIRS
- Often noninfectious etiology found
- Pulmonary embolism
- Myocardial infarction
- Gastrointestinal bleed
- Acute pancreatitis
- Cardiopulmonary bypass
15Intravenous-line Infections
- Prevalence 5 in ICU patients in a University of
VA study of triple-lumen and pulmonary artery
catheters - Bloodstream infection is a serious
catheter-related complication case fatality rate
10-20
Cobb DK. NEJM 3271062-8, 1992
16Intravenous-line Infections
- Look for local signs of infection present in lt
50 - Remove line if no other source and T gt 102º
17Scheduled Replacement?
- UVA study
- Inclusion criteria All patients admitted to the
ICU who needed triple-lumen central venous
catheters or pulmonary artery catheters inserted
via SC or IJ for gt 3 days
Cobb DK. NEJM 3271062-8, 1992
18Scheduled Replacement?
- Four groups
- 1 replaced q 3 days with a new stick
- 2 replaced every 3 days over guidewire
- 3 replaced only if clinically indicated
(fever, mechanical complications) with new
stick - 4 replaced only if clinically indicated over
guidewire
19Scheduled Replacement?
- Total of 160 patients enrolled 523 catheters.
- No statistically significant difference in
catheter-related bloodstream infections among
groups - Statistically significant increase in mechanical
complications with new sticks vs. guidewire
exchange
20Scheduled Replacement?
- No support for changing lines every 3-5 days
change only if unexplained fever or catheter
malfunction occurs - Concurs with CDCs Guideline for Prevention of
Intravascular Device-Related Infections. Am J
Infect Control 199624262-293
21Nosocomial Pneumonia
- Almost all cases occur in mechanically ventilated
patients - Signs are
- fever
- leukocytosis
- purulent tracheal secretions
- new or worsening infiltrates on CXR
22Nosocomial Pneumonia
- However, none of these are predictive of
pneumonia nosocomial pneumonia remains a
clinical diagnosis - Can be confused with fibroproliferative phase of
ARDS, usually accompanied by low-grade fever - Semi-quantitative BAL and protected-brush
specimen may be helpful, but not widely available
23Nosocomial Sinusitis
- Bacteriology differs markedly from
community-acquired disease - Gram-negative bacilli cause most cases in
intubated patients - Polymicrobial infection in upto 50 of cases,
reflecting ICU flora - Paranasal sinusitis accounts for about 5 of
nosocomial ICU infections
24Nosocomial Sinusitis
- Fever and leukocytosis often present
- Purulent nasal discharge often lacking
- Common in trauma and neurosurgical units
25Nosocomial Sinusitis
- Risk factors
- nasotracheal tubes
- nasogastric tubes
- nasal packing
- facial fractures
- steroid therapy
- Diagnosis made easier with sinus CT, which is
more sensitive than plain films - Avoid prolonged nasotracheal intubation
26Intra-abdominal Infections
- Suspect intra-abdominal abscess in patients with
prolonged post-operative fever after abdominal
surgery - Acalculous cholecystitis and subsequent biliary
sepsis may complicate post-operative period
27Intra-abdominal Infections
- Suspect antibiotic-associated colitis due to
Clostridium difficile in patients on
broad-spectrum antibiotics - Fever and leukocytosis may be present prior to
diarrhea or abdominal symptoms - Splenic or hepatic abscesses may complicate other
intra-abdominal infections (cholecystitis,
appendicitis) causing prolonged fevers
28Catheter-Associated Bacteriuria
- Foley catheters
- Result in acquisition of bacteriuria
- Nearly always represents colonization, not
infection - Pyuria often accompanies CAB, mimicking a UTI
29Catheter-Associated Bacteriuria
- Foley high fever bacteriuria
- does not necessarily mean urosepsis
- unless their is partial or total obstruction or
pre-existing renal disease - Asymptomatic CAB
- in normal hosts need not be treated
- in compromised hosts and chronically
immunosuppressed must be treated promptly
30Drug Fever
- Some 3-7 of fevers on an inpatient medical
service are drug reactions - History of atopy is a risk factor
- Patient may have been on the sensitizing
medication for days to years
31Drug Fever
- On physical patient looks inappropriately well
for degree of fever - fever usually 102º to 104º
- relative bradycardia
- 5-10 have rash
32Drug Fever
- Lab tests show
- leukocytosis with left shift
- eosinophils on peripheral smear (common)
- eosinophilia (low-grade)
- elevated ESR
- mildly elevated AP, AST, ALT
33Common Causes of Drug Fever
- Antibiotics
- Sleep medications
- Antiepileptics
- Stool Softeners
- Diuretics
- Antihypertensives
- Antidepressants
- Antiarrhythmics
- NSAIDs
34Rare Causes of Drug Fever
- Digoxin
- Steroids
- Diphenhydramine
- Aspirin
- Vitamins
- Aminoglycosides
- Tetracyclines
- Erythromycins
- Chloramphenicol
- Vancomycin
- Imipenim
- Quinolones
35Postoperative Fever
- Fever common post-operatively
- Most episodes noninfectious
- Probably due to intraoperative tissue trauma with
subsequent release of endogenous pyrogens into
the bloodstream
Garibaldi RA. Infect Control 6273, 1985
36Postoperative Fever
- Garibaldi found that 72 of fevers within the
48º after surgery were non-infectious - Wound, urinary tract, and respiratory infections
occur later than 48º
Garibaldi RA. Infect Control 6273, 1985
37Postoperative Fever
- Empiric antibiotics should be withheld in
patients with fever within 48º of surgery if they
lack a specific diagnosis after thorough
evaluation - Continuing perioperative prophylactic antibiotics
does not prevent infection, only selects for
resistant organisms
38Fever in Neurosurgical Patient
- Most important causes are
- Wound infection
- Meningitis, an infrequent post-op complication,
especially after open-head trauma
39Fever in Neurosurgical Patient
- Commonest clinical entity is posterior fossa
syndrome - stiff neck, low CSF glucose, elevated protein,
mostly neutrophils - Can occur after any intracranial procedure
- Symptoms due to blood in CSF
- Culture negative, and symptoms subside as RBCs
decrease over time in CSF
40Causes of High Fever (³ 106º)
- Central fevers
- intracranial hemorrhage, head trauma, infection,
malignancy - especially if the base of the brain or
hypothalamus affected - Infusion-related sepsis (contaminated infusate)
- Rarely, bacterial infection
- Drug fever (usually 102º to 106º)
41Causes of High Fever (³ 106º)
- Malignant hyperthermia
- Rare genetic disorder, probably autosomal
dominant - Incidence 115,000 in kids less in adults
- Hypercatabolic reaction to anesthetic drugs
- Sustained muscle contraction -gt excess heat
- Tachycardia occurs in gt90 of pts within 30
minutes - Treated with dantrolene mortality 7
42Causes of High Fever (³ 106º)
- Malignant neuroleptic syndromes
- Confusion, hyperthermia, muscle stiffness,
autonomic instability - Drugs implicated phenothiazines, thioxanthines,
butyrphenones--antipsychotics, tranquilizers, and
antiemetics - Dantrolene or bromocriptine, a dopamine agonist,
effective in uncontrolled studies
43Summary
- Fever in the ICU can have many infectious and
noninfectious etiologies - Crucial to identify the precise cause as some of
the conditions in each groups are
life-threatening, while others require no
treatment - Routine fever work-up not cost-effective
- If initial evaluation shows no infection,
antibiotics should be withheld - Empiric antibiotics may be started in the
unstable patient, but stopped if infection is not
evident later