Fever with rash

Introduction

Introduction Fever accompanied by a rash is a symptom of a fever caused by a rash-like infectious disease accompanied by a rash. Often caused by infectious diseases caused by viruses or bacteria, such as children with acute rash, chickenpox, scarlet fever, etc., should be diagnosed and treated early, properly isolated to reduce the risk of infection. Patients with measles should be reported immediately for epidemics, and 5 days after the isolation of the respiratory tract to the rash, and those with complications should be extended to 10 days. All susceptible children who are exposed to the patient should be quarantined for 3 weeks and given automatic or passive immunity according to the situation. Those who receive the immunologic preparation should extend the quarantine to 4 weeks. During the measles epidemic, patients should be vigorously promoted not to go out, medicines are delivered to the door, susceptible children do not suffer from the door, collective institutions strengthen morning inspections, and suspicious persons should be isolated and observed.

Cause

Cause

Common in rash infections. Such as measles, scarlet fever, etc.

Examine

an examination

Symptoms: Fever with rash can be used as a basis for diagnosis.

Diagnosis

Differential diagnosis

(1) fever with chills

Common in lobar pneumonia, sepsis, acute cholecystitis, acute pyelonephritis, epidemic cerebrospinal meningitis, leptospirosis, malaria, acute hemolytic disease.

(2) fever with eye congestion

Common in measles, epidemic hemorrhagic fever, typhus, etc., similar to rabbit eye performance.

(3) fever with bleeding

Common in severe infections and blood diseases. The former such as severe measles, epidemic hemorrhagic fever, dengue fever, viral hepatitis, typhus, sepsis, infective endocarditis, leptospirosis. The latter are acute leukemia, acute aplastic anemia, malignant histiocytosis.

4) fever with lymphadenopathy, accompanied by tenderness

May be caused by a local infection. Such as systemic lymphadenopathy, suggesting that there may be lymph node tuberculosis, leukemia, lymphoma, metastatic cancer.

(5) fever with joint swelling and pain

Can be seen in sepsis, scarlet fever, brucellosis, tuberculosis, rheumatic fever, connective tissue disease, gout and so on.

The material in this site is intended to be of general informational use and is not intended to constitute medical advice, probable diagnosis, or recommended treatments.

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