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Drug-induced hyperthermia

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Find sources: "Drug-induced hyperthermia" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (October 2018)
This article is about hyperthermia as an undesired byproduct of a particular drug treatment. For deliberately inducing fever as a means of treating infection, see Pyrotherapy. For the practice in oncology, see Hyperthermia therapy. For using heat to treat pain, see Heat therapy.

Drug-induced fever is a symptom of an adverse drug reaction wherein the administration of drugs intended to help a patient causes a hypermetabolic state resulting in fever. The drug may interfere with heat dissipation peripherally, increase the rate of metabolism, evoke a cellular or humoral immune response, mimic endogenous pyrogen, or damage tissues.

Triggers

Clinical treatment

The primary treatment strategy is to eliminate or discontinue the offensive agent. Supportive therapy, such as ice packs, may be provided to get the body temperature within physiologic range. In severe cases, when the fever is high enough (generally at or above ~104°F or 40°C), aggressive cooling such as an ice bath and pharmacologic therapy such as benzodiazepines may be deemed appropriate.

References

  1. Diagnosis and treatment of drug-induced hyperthermia. Musselman, ME. Saely, S. doi: 10.2146/ajhp110543 American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy January 1, 2013 vol. 70 no. 1 34-42

External links

Signs and symptoms that are general or constitutional
Temperature
heat
cold
Aches and pains
Malaise and fatigue
Miscellaneous
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