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Clinical Pediatrics
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The Clinical Course of Childhood Asthma in Association with Fever

A. Sahib El-Radhi, FRCPCH, PhD

Queen Mary's Hospital, Sidcup, Kent, sahib.el-radhi@ hotmail.co.uk

Swatee Patel, PhD

Department of COmputing and Mathematical Sciences, University of Greenwich, Woolwich, London United Kingdom

Little attention has been given to the relationship between fever and the severity of asthma. The authors studied 202 successive admissions of children with asthma over a period of 16 months to investigate the relationship between fever and the clinical course of asthma. There were 38 febrile children (18.8%), who were mostly younger than 5 years. Febrile children had a shorter mean hospital stay than afebrile children (1.7 vs 2.0 days). There were 25 episodes of acute severe asthma (13%): 2 among the 38 febrile children (5.2%), compared with 23 episodes among the remaining 164 afebrile children (14%). Three children, who had very severe asthma requiring transfer to an intensive care unit, were afebrile. Radiological abnormalities (collapse/consolidation) occurred in 13 cases: 3 from the febrile and 10 from the afebrile group. Monitoring body temperature is important in cases of asthma. Febrile children tend to be younger and are more likely to have a less severe clinical course of asthma.

Key Words: asthma • asthma severity • fever

This version was published on July 1, 2009

Clinical Pediatrics, Vol. 48, No. 6, 627-631 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0009922809335320


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