FACTITIOUS FEVER
1957; American College of Physicians; Volume: 46; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês
10.7326/0003-4819-46-6-1039
ISSN1539-3704
AutoresRobert G. Petersdorf, Ivan L. Bennett,
Tópico(s)Autopsy Techniques and Outcomes
ResumoArticle1 June 1957FACTITIOUS FEVERROBERT G. PETERSDORF, M.D., IVAN L. BENNETT JR., M.D.ROBERT G. PETERSDORF, M.D.Search for more papers by this author, IVAN L. BENNETT JR., M.D.Search for more papers by this authorAuthor, Article, and Disclosure Informationhttps://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-46-6-1039 SectionsAboutPDF ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack CitationsPermissions ShareFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail ExcerptThe problem of elucidating the etiology of fever is one of the most fascinating and challenging that confronts the physician. It is of course well recognized that fever can be a prominent manifestation of many diseases of widely diversified etiology, and that the diagnostic possibilities in any given case may be legion. Furthermore, because body temperature is routinely recorded in clinical practice and considered to be an "objective" physical finding, its reliability is rarely questioned. Thus, while a definitive diagnosis is not always established in febrile illnesses, so-called "F.U.O.'s," the question of whether a patient actually has fever is seldom...Bibliography1. MacNeal WJ: Hyperthermia, genuine and spurious, Arch. Int. Med. 64: 800, 1939. CrossrefGoogle Scholar2. HaleEvseichick VO: Fraudulent fever, Am. J. Nursing 43: 992, 1943. Google Scholar3. Bennett IL: The significance of fever in infections, Yale J. Biol. and Med. 26: 491, 1954. MedlineGoogle Scholar4. Beeson PB: Fever in Signs and symptoms: applied pathologic physiology and clinical interpretation, C. M. MacBride, Editor, 2nd Ed., 1952, J. B. Lippincott, Philadelphia. Google Scholar5. Osler W, in The principles and practice of medicine, 3d Ed., 1898, D. Appleton and Company, New York, pp. 1119-1120. Google Scholar6. Reimann HA: Habitual hyperthermia, J. A. M. A. 99: 1860, 1932. CrossrefGoogle Scholar7. Reimann HA: The problem of long-continued low-grade fever, J. A. M. A. 107: 1089, 1936. 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MedlineGoogle Scholar This content is PDF only. To continue reading please click on the PDF icon. Author, Article, and Disclosure InformationAffiliations: Baltimore, Maryland*Received for publication August 6, 1956.From the Biological Division, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins Medical School, Baltimore, Maryland.†Fellow of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis.Requests for reprints should be addressed to Robert G. Petersdorf, M.D., The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore 5, Maryland. PreviousarticleNextarticle Advertisement FiguresReferencesRelatedDetails Metrics Cited byHabitual Hyperthermia: An Interpretive Paradigm of the 20th Century? 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BERGETHON, M.D.Munchausen's syndrome presenting as respiratory failure requiring intubationDifferentialdiagnose bei bisher ungeklärtem Fieber: Bedeutung klinischer BegleitsymptomeCHRONIC FACTITIOUS DISORDERS: Helping Those Who Hurt ThemselvesVorgetäuschte KrankheitChronic factitious illness: Recognition and management of deceptionFactitious illnessFactitious Disorders in a Teaching HospitalPETER REICH, M. D., LILI A. GOTTFRIED, M.D.Chronic Factitious Disorder with Physical Symptoms (The Munchausen Syndrome)Factitious Polymicrobial Bacteremia: A Case ReportCardiac presentation of Munchausen's syndromeProbing the Dynamics of Münchausen's Syndrome Detailed Analysis of a CasePETER G. JUSTUS, M.D., SARAH S. KREUTZIGER, M.S.W., CRAIG S. KITCHENS, M.D.Munchausen’s syndrome revisitedEditor's MailFactitious Fever and Self-Induced Infection A Report of 32 Cases and Review of the LiteratureROBERT P. ADUAN, M.D., ANTHONY S. FAUCI, M.D., DAVID C. DALE, M.D., JOSEPH H. HERZBERG, M.D., SHELDON M. WOLFF, M.D.Whole body59Fe-elimination rates and corresponding blood losses in patients with factitious anemia induced by self-blood lettingFactitious and fraudulent feverMunchausen's syndrome: A successfully treated caseA Baffling HyperpyrexiaDiagnosticsUrinary TemperatureNonorganic adverse reactions to aeroallergen immunotherapySelf-Induced Abscesses: A Diagnostic and Treatment EnigmaCARDIAC ARREST AS A PRESENTATION OF MÜNCHHAUSEN SYNDROMEFever of Undetermined OriginChronic Factitious Fever in Puberty and Adolescence: A Diagnostic Challenge to the Family PhysicianFever of Unknown OriginFactitious Subcutaneous EmphysemaM. ERIC GERSHWIN, M.D., JAMES K. GUDE, M.D., JOHN PETRALLI, M.D.Persistent Perplexing Pyrexia: Some Comments on Etiology and DiagnosisMassive rectal bleeding in a malingering patientMunchausen's syndromeFever of Unknown OriginFactitious AnemiaW. J. R. DAILY, M.D., J. M. COLES, M.D., W. P. CREGER, M.D.FACTITIOUS FEVER OF UNUSUAL ORIGINParoxysmal MyoglobinuriaFever, Fraud, and Failure 1 June 1957Volume 46, Issue 6Page: 1039-1062KeywordsEtiologyFeversHypoglycemiaPoliomyelitisTemperature ePublished: 1 December 2008 Issue Published: 1 June 1957 PDF downloadLoading ...
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