Red Flags in Fever - When Fevers Get Fiery
Fever is common, but certain features suggest a severe underlying pathology requiring immediate investigation. Look for signs of sepsis, meningitis, or other life-threatening infections.
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Key Patient Groups:
- Neonates (<28 days) & Infants (<3 months)
- Elderly patients
- Immunocompromised (e.g., chemotherapy, asplenia, chronic steroids, HIV)
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Critical Signs & Symptoms:
- Vitals: Temp >40°C (104°F) or <36°C (96.8°F); hypotension; tachycardia; respiratory distress.
- Neurologic: Altered mental status, lethargy, inconsolability, seizure, severe headache, nuchal rigidity.
- Dermatologic: Non-blanching rash (petechiae, purpura), erythroderma (toxic shock syndrome), or signs of necrotizing fasciitis.
- Other: New heart murmur (endocarditis), severe localized pain, inability to bear weight, persistent vomiting.
⭐ A non-blanching petechial rash with fever is a classic sign of meningococcemia, a medical emergency requiring immediate antibiotic administration, even before definitive diagnosis.

Vulnerable Populations - Fragile & Febrile
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Neonates (<28 days)
- Any fever >38°C (100.4°F) is a sepsis workup until proven otherwise.
- Signs can be subtle: lethargy, poor feeding, irritability, hypothermia.
- Low threshold for lumbar puncture and empiric antibiotics.
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Elderly (>65 years)
- Often present without fever (blunted response).
- Look for atypical signs: confusion, delirium, falls, functional decline.
- Common sources: UTI, pneumonia, skin/soft tissue infections.
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Immunocompromised
- Neutropenia: Single oral temp >38.3°C or >38.0°C for >1 hr; ANC <500/μL.
- HIV: Consider opportunistic infections based on CD4 count.
- Transplant/Biologics: High risk for bacterial, viral (CMV), and fungal infections.
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Asplenia / Splenic Dysfunction
- Massive risk from encapsulated organisms: S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae, N. meningitidis.
- 📌 Mnemonic: SHiN
⭐ In neutropenic fever, the absence of neutrophils means classic signs of infection (e.g., pus formation) may be absent. A single fever spike is a medical emergency requiring immediate broad-spectrum antibiotics.
Critical Diagnoses - The Fever Fast Five
- Meningitis/Encephalitis: Nuchal rigidity, photophobia, altered mental status. Get LP for CSF. Start empiric antibiotics/steroids.
- Sepsis/Septic Shock: Dysregulated host response. Use qSOFA/SOFA for organ dysfunction. Key signs: hypotension (MAP <65 mmHg), tachycardia.
- Necrotizing Fasciitis: Pain out of proportion to exam. Rapidly spreading erythema, edema, bullae, crepitus. Requires immediate surgical debridement.
- Infective Endocarditis: New murmur, fever, embolic events. 📌 FROM JANE (Fever, Roth, Osler, Murmur, Janeway). Obtain 3 sets of blood cultures.
- Occult Abscess: (e.g., Epidural, Psoas, Tubo-ovarian). Focal pain with constitutional symptoms. Diagnosis requires targeted imaging (CT/MRI).
⭐ Pain out of proportion to exam is the most sensitive early finding for necrotizing fasciitis, often preceding skin changes like bullae or necrosis.

High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Fever in a neonate (<28 days) is a septic-until-proven-otherwise emergency, mandating a full workup.
- Suspect infective endocarditis with fever and a new or changing heart murmur.
- A petechial or purpuric rash with fever is a classic sign of meningococcemia or Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever.
- Immunocompromised status (e.g., neutropenia, HIV) dramatically lowers the threshold for aggressive investigation.
- Altered mental status, seizures, or nuchal rigidity with fever suggests a CNS infection.
- Always consider travel history for exposure to infections like malaria or dengue.
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