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Comparison of classical diagnostic criteria and Chinese revised diagnostic criteria for fever of unknown origin in Chinese patients

Fever of unknown origin (FUO) has always been a challenging problem for physicians since it was first reported half a century ago. This study aimed to investigate the clinical features of FUO and to compare the clinical significance of the classical diagnostic criteria and the Chinese revised diagno...

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Published in:Therapeutics and clinical risk management 2016-01, Vol.12, p.1545-1551
Main Authors: Li, Jia-Jun, Huang, Wen-Xiang, Shi, Zheng-Yu, Sun, Qiu, Xin, Xiao-Juan, Zhao, Jin-Qiu, Yin, Zhen
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Huang, Wen-Xiang
Shi, Zheng-Yu
Sun, Qiu
Xin, Xiao-Juan
Zhao, Jin-Qiu
Yin, Zhen
description Fever of unknown origin (FUO) has always been a challenging problem for physicians since it was first reported half a century ago. This study aimed to investigate the clinical features of FUO and to compare the clinical significance of the classical diagnostic criteria and the Chinese revised diagnostic criteria of FUO. We retrospectively collected a series of 140 patients admitted to our hospital between September 2011 and June 2013 because of prolonged febrile illnesses (lasting at least 2 weeks, temperature ≥38.5°C) without diagnosis and categorized them into two groups according to the Chinese revised diagnostic criteria (group A) and classical diagnostic criteria (group B) for FUO. The A group included patients presenting with fever persisting between 2 and 3 weeks with the diagnosis remaining uncertain after three outpatient visits or at least 3 days of hospital investigation. The B group included patients presenting with fever persisting for more than 3 weeks with no established diagnosis after 1 week of hospital investigation. The general conditions, etiologies, definite diagnosis times, and diagnostic methods of the two groups were compared. There were no significant differences in the general conditions, etiologies, definite diagnosis times, and diagnostic methods between the Chinese revised diagnostic criteria and classical diagnostic criteria. Both the examined FUO diagnostic criteria are suitable for clinical practice in this region.
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source Taylor & Francis Open Access; Publicly Available Content Database; Dove Press Free; PubMed Central
subjects Blood
Bone marrow
Clinical medicine
comparison
Diagnosis
diagnostic criteria
Disease
drug design
Etiology
Fever
Fever of unknown origin
Hospitals
Illnesses
Laboratories
Medical diagnosis
Original Research
Patients
Researchers
title Comparison of classical diagnostic criteria and Chinese revised diagnostic criteria for fever of unknown origin in Chinese patients
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