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BACKGROUND
The lack of characteristic clinical findings and accurate diagnostic tools has made the diagnosis of enteric fever difficult. We evaluated the classic signs of relative bradycardia and eosinopenia as diagnostic predictors for enteric fever among travellers who had returned from the
OBJECTIVE
We recently found increased temperature and increased bradycardia and desaturation during skin-to-skin care (SSC). We wanted to determine if these effects were related.
METHODS
Twenty-two infants (median gestational age at birth 28.5 weeks [range 24-31], median age at study 25.5 days
Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF) is an acute tick-borne viral zoonotic disease which is endemic in Turkey. Bradycardia has been reported among pediatric and adult patients with CCHF. But, it remains unclear, whether bradycardia is associated with ribavirin treatment or the severity of CCHF. In
Steroids are used in the treatment of acute rheumatic fever with moderate-to-severe carditis. Corticosteroids have several cardiovascular side affects that are more common in adults than in children. Corticosteroid-related bradycardia is a rarely seen side effect. Children with bradycardia following
We investigated pulse-temperature relationships in 66 children with enteric fever (group 1) and in 76 with other infections (group 2). Group 1 children were older than group 2 children (mean age +/- SD, 91 +/- 36 vs. 66 +/- 32 months, respectively; P < .001) and had mean oral temperatures +/- SD
Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF) is a potentially fatal fever due to infection with the CCHF virus, which belongs to the genus Nairovirus in the Bunyaviridae family and causes severe disease in humans, with reported mortality rates of 15-70% (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 1983 ).
Neonatal rodents deficient in medullary serotonin neurons have respiratory instability and enhanced spontaneous bradycardias. This study asks if, in Pet-1(-/-) mice over development: 1) the respiratory instability leads to hypoxia; 2) greater bradycardia is related to the degree of hypoxia or
BACKGROUND
Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF) is a zoonotic viral disease with a high mortality rate. In clinical practice, we observed bradycardia in some pediatric patients with CCHF during the clinical course. So we aimed to report CCHF cases that presented bradycardia during the clinical
Fever of unknown origin (FUO) is the diagnosis associated with a variety of infectious, neoplastic, or rheumatic/inflammatory disorders. FUOs are associated with fevers of > or = 101 degrees F for > or = 3 weeks that remain undiagnosed after intensive in-hospital or ambulatory investigation. Many