Sahib El-Radhi A, Patel Swatee
Queen Mary's Hospital, Sidcup, Kent; Department of Computing and Mathematical Sciences, University of Greenwich, Woolwich, London, United Kingdom. sahib.el-radhi@ hotmail.co.uk
Clin Pediatr (Phila). 2009 Jul;48(6):627-31. doi: 10.1177/0009922809335320. Epub 2009 Apr 30.
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.