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Fever in the ICU

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Fever in the ICU Simranjit Singh Galhotra, MD, MBA George Washington University Fellow, Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine January 1998 Fever, A Little History ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fever in the ICU


1
Fever in the ICU
  • Simranjit Singh Galhotra, MD, MBA
  • George Washington University
  • Fellow, Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine
  • January 1998

2
Fever, 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

3
Fever, 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

4
Fever, 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

5
Evolutionary 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

6
Mechanism 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
7
Nosocomial Fevers
  • Hospital-acquired fevers occur in one-third of
    all medical inpatients
  • Nosocomial fevers even more common in the ICU

8
Fever 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

9
Diagnostic Approach
  • Fever is a non-specific sign seen in inflammatory
    processes that may be
  • infectious
  • noninfectious, including neoplastic
  • The 102º Rule

10
Temp lt 102º
  • Acute cholecystitis
  • Acute MI
  • Dresslers Syndrome
  • Thrombophlebitis
  • GI bleed
  • Acute pancreatitis
  • Pulmonary embolism or infarct
  • Viral hepatitis
  • Uncomplicated wound infection

11
Temp ³ 102º
  • Cholangitis
  • Suppurative phlebitis
  • Pericarditis
  • Septic pulmonary embolism
  • Pancreatic abscess
  • Non-viral liver disease drug fever,
    leptospirosis
  • Complicated wound infection
  • Bowel infarction

12
Causes 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

13
Systemic 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

14
SIRS
  • Often noninfectious etiology found
  • Pulmonary embolism
  • Myocardial infarction
  • Gastrointestinal bleed
  • Acute pancreatitis
  • Cardiopulmonary bypass

15
Intravenous-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
16
Intravenous-line Infections
  • Look for local signs of infection present in lt
    50
  • Remove line if no other source and T gt 102º

17
Scheduled 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
18
Scheduled 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

19
Scheduled 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

20
Scheduled 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

21
Nosocomial Pneumonia
  • Almost all cases occur in mechanically ventilated
    patients
  • Signs are
  • fever
  • leukocytosis
  • purulent tracheal secretions
  • new or worsening infiltrates on CXR

22
Nosocomial 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

23
Nosocomial 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

24
Nosocomial Sinusitis
  • Fever and leukocytosis often present
  • Purulent nasal discharge often lacking
  • Common in trauma and neurosurgical units

25
Nosocomial 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

26
Intra-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

27
Intra-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

28
Catheter-Associated Bacteriuria
  • Foley catheters
  • Result in acquisition of bacteriuria
  • Nearly always represents colonization, not
    infection
  • Pyuria often accompanies CAB, mimicking a UTI

29
Catheter-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

30
Drug 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

31
Drug Fever
  • On physical patient looks inappropriately well
    for degree of fever
  • fever usually 102º to 104º
  • relative bradycardia
  • 5-10 have rash

32
Drug Fever
  • Lab tests show
  • leukocytosis with left shift
  • eosinophils on peripheral smear (common)
  • eosinophilia (low-grade)
  • elevated ESR
  • mildly elevated AP, AST, ALT

33
Common Causes of Drug Fever
  • Antibiotics
  • Sleep medications
  • Antiepileptics
  • Stool Softeners
  • Diuretics
  • Antihypertensives
  • Antidepressants
  • Antiarrhythmics
  • NSAIDs

34
Rare Causes of Drug Fever
  • Digoxin
  • Steroids
  • Diphenhydramine
  • Aspirin
  • Vitamins
  • Aminoglycosides
  • Tetracyclines
  • Erythromycins
  • Chloramphenicol
  • Vancomycin
  • Imipenim
  • Quinolones

35
Postoperative 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
36
Postoperative 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
37
Postoperative 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

38
Fever in Neurosurgical Patient
  • Most important causes are
  • Wound infection
  • Meningitis, an infrequent post-op complication,
    especially after open-head trauma

39
Fever 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

40
Causes 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)

41
Causes 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

42
Causes 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

43
Summary
  • 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
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