Exam 4: Dr. Mackin Fever Flashcards Preview

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Flashcards in Exam 4: Dr. Mackin Fever Deck (39)
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1
Q

At what temperature is an animal considered to have a fever?

A

Greater than 103 degrees

2
Q

What is fever also known as?

A

Pyrexia

3
Q

What are the 2 reasons to have high body temperature?

A

Hyperthermia and fever

4
Q

What is hyperthermia?

A

When a hot animal wants to be cooler

5
Q

What is fever?

A

When a hot animal wants to be warmer

6
Q

What is the difference between fever and hyperthermia?

A

Thermoregulatory set point

7
Q

What happens to the thermoregulatory set point with true fever?

A

It is reset to higher level in animals

8
Q

What do pyrogens do?

A

Give you pyrexia

9
Q

What are the endogenous pyrogens?

A

Organisms
Antigens
Foreign substances
Drugs

10
Q

What are the exogenous pyrogens?

A

Cytokines IL-1, IL-6, TNF-α

11
Q

What are endogenous pyrogens?

A

The universal endpoint to cause a fever

12
Q

What do the cytokines that are released during a fever do?

A

Reset thermoregulatory set point via local prostaglandins

13
Q

What are the steps to a fever?

A

IL-1 secreted by phagocytes travels in blood to hypothalamus
Hypothalamus secreted prostaglandin, which resets hypothalamic thermostat
Nerve impulses cause shivering, higher metabolic rate, inhibition of sweating, and vasoconstriction
These increases body temperature to the point set by the hypothalamic thermostat

14
Q

What do the endogenous pyrogens do?

A

Non-specific response to many infections, inflammatory, and neoplastic diseases
Mediators of systemic inflammatory response

15
Q

What is the demeanor of an animal with hyperthermia?

A

Excited
Agitated
Distressed

16
Q

What is the behavior of an animal with hyperthermia?

A

Panting
Vasodilation
Sweating
Cold-seeking

17
Q

What is the body temperature of an animal with hyperthermia?

A

Up to 110 degrees F or greater

18
Q

What is the demeanor of an animal with fever?

A

Lethargic
Depressed
Anorectic

19
Q

What is the behavior of an animal with fever?

A

Shivering/huddling
Vasoconstriction
Piloerection
Heat-seeking

20
Q

What is the body temperature of an animal with fever?

A

Rarely more than 106 to 107 degrees F

21
Q

What are the causes of fever?

A
Infectious
Inflammatory
Immunologic
Neoplastic
Drug-associated
22
Q

What is the most common cause of fever?

A

Bacterial infection

23
Q

Why do we have fever?

A

May be a protective mechanism

24
Q

What does having a fever do?

A

Enhances host immunity
Inhibits bacterial growth by reducing serum iron concentration
Contributes to neoplastic cell death
Encourages rest in affected animal

25
Q

What happens with enhanced host immunity?

A

Increased leukocyte mobility
Enhanced phagocytosis
Increased proliferation of T cells

26
Q

What is inflammation?

A

Complex reaction in vascularized connective tisse

27
Q

What does inflammation lead to?

A

Accumulation of fluid and white blood cells in extravascular tissues

28
Q

How is inflammation a protective mechanism?

A

It removes the cause of cell injury (organism/toxin)

Consequences of cell injury (dead cells/debris)

29
Q

What are the potentially harmful consequences of inflammation?

A
Hypersensitivity
Chronic inflammatory disease
Immune-mediated disease
Scar tissue/fibrosis
Systemic inflammatory response
30
Q

What is the entire inflammatory process mediated by?

A

Chemicals derived from plasma and cells (inflammatory mediators)

31
Q

What are the 5 cardinal signs of inflammation?

A
Redness (rubor)
Swelling (tumor)
Heat (calor)
Pain (dolor)
Loss of function (functio laesa)
32
Q

What are inflammatory mediators?

A

Vasoactive amines (histamine and serotonin)
Plasma proteases Arachidonic acid metabolites (prostaglandins and leukotrienes)
Platelet activation factor
Nitric oxide
Oxygen-derived free radicals
Cytokines (IL-1, IL-6, TNF-α)

33
Q

What is the source of cytokines as a mediator?

A

Lymphocytes, macrophages, and EC

34
Q

What is the systemic inflammatory response mediated by?

A

Cytokines IL-1, IL-6 TNF-α

35
Q

What makes up systemic inflammatory response?

A
Fever
Anorexia/cachexia
Lethargy/malaise
Acute phase proteins
Neutrophilia
Anemia of chronic disease
Glucocorticoid release
36
Q

What are the predictable lab results in a patient with fever?

A

Inflammatory or stress leukogram
Anemia or chronic disease
Mild hypoalbuminemia
Mild to marked hyperglobulinemia

37
Q

Why is physical cooling bad?

A

Contraindicated

Stressed and distresses patient

38
Q

What should be used instead of physical cooling?

A

NSAIDs

39
Q

How do NSAIDs work?

A

Turn off the prostaglandins in the hypothamus which helps reset the thermoregulatory set point

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