Hospital-acquired fever


















Bloodstream

Intravascular device-related (e.g., triple-lumen central venous catheter, Hickman, Broviac, Port)

Sepsis due to bacterial or fungal organisms
Central nervous system

Epidural abscess

Meningitis
Gastrointestinal

Cholangitis

Diverticulitis

Intra-abdominal abscess

Pseudomembranous colitis
Respiratory tract

Aspiration pneumonia

Empyema

Hospital-acquired pneumonia

Sinusitis

Ventilator-associated pneumonia
Skin and soft tissue

Cellulitis

Myonecrosis

Necrotizing fasciitis
Surgical site (incisional, deep space, or abscess)
Urinary tract

Catheter-related

Postinstrumentation (e.g., cystoscopy)
Other

Endocarditis

Prosthetic-device infection

Suppurative thrombophlebitis

Transfusion-related (bacterial, fungal, viral, parasitic)




Table 105.2 Examples of noninfectious causes of hospital-acquired fever























Biologic agents (e.g., vaccines, cytokines)/drugs

Alcohol or drug withdrawal

Drug fever

Drug overdose (e.g., anticholinergic agents)

Neuroleptic malignant syndrome
Cardiac causes

Myocardial infarction

Pericarditis
Collagen vascular diseases

Vasculitis
Endocrine disorders

Adrenal insufficiency

Thyroid storm
Factitious fever
Inflammatory diseases

Gout, pseudogout

Nonviral hepatitis
Intra-abdominal conditions

Acalculous cholecystitis

Acute pancreatitis

Mesenteric ischemia

Upper or lower gastrointestinal bleeding
Malignancy

Tumor fever
Neurologic conditions

Intracranial or subarachnoid hemorrhage

Seizures

Stroke

Subdural hematoma
Procedure related
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