Sc. Colachis et Sm. Otis, OCCURRENCE OF FEVER ASSOCIATED WITH THERMOREGULATORY DYSFUNCTION AFTER ACUTE TRAUMATIC SPINAL-CORD INJURY, American journal of physical medicine & rehabilitation, 74(2), 1995, pp. 114-119
The medical records of 156 patients with acute traumatic Spinal Cord I
njury (SCI), admitted for inpatient SCI rehabilitation during the peri
od from January 1, 1990 through December 31, 1992, were retrospectivel
y reviewed. Seventy-one patients with acute traumatic SCI were identif
ied at risk for thermoregulatory dysfunction (50 patients with cervica
l SCI and 21 with upper thoracic level SCI). A total of 713 days were
documented in which febrile events occurred in 60 of 71 patients durin
g the study period. Over 39% of these fevers measured 101 degrees F (3
8.3 degrees C) or greater, There were 71 days of documented febrile ep
isodes occurring in 17 patients for which an etiology could not be det
ermined. Fifteen of these individuals had fewer than five such febrile
days each during their entire rehabilitation hospitalization. Study r
esults indicate that in a population of patients with acute traumatic
SCI at risk for thermoregulatory dysfunction, the occurrence of fever
is quite high. Fever not attributable to infectious or inflammatory et
iologies is uncommon. Fever attributable to thermoregulatory dysfuncti
on in this setting should be considered only after other etiologies ha
ve been carefully excluded.