| Literature DB >> 35481239 |
Manisha Bhagat1, Saurabh Suman1, Kartik C Besra1, Tushar Kumar1, Shio Priye1, Pradip K Bhattacharya2, Ladhu Lakra1.
Abstract
The most common cause of postoperative fever is infection. Other causes include cancer, iatrogenic causes, venous thromboembolism, secondary to prosthetic implants, and pyrexia of unknown origin. Here, we describe five cases of opioid-induced pyrexia. In all cases, an injection of morphine was given for postoperative analgesia and all those patients developed fever. All the possible causes of fever were excluded and then opioid was substituted with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents. Fever subsided in all the cases. Cessation of the offending drug led to the resolution of the fever in all five cases, and the patient required subsequent supportive care. However, adjunctive pharmacotherapy may also be needed in some patients.Entities:
Keywords: cervical cord; cox-2 inhibitors; intervertebral disc; non-steroidal antiinflammatory drugs; opioid use; post operative fever; postopertive infection; prostheses and implants; venous thromboembolism (vte)
Year: 2022 PMID: 35481239 PMCID: PMC9034657 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.24402
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Patient profile and relevant findings.
| Sno | Age (years) | Sex | Diagnosis | Procedure | Offending drug | Route of administration | Total leukocyte count ( per cubic mm) | Maximum temperature (°F) |
| 1 | 3 | F | Wilms tumor | Exploratory laprotomy with tumor excision | Morphine | Intravenous | 6500 | 105 |
| 2 | 46 | F | Pancreatic tumor | Whipple procedure | Morphine | Epidural | 8400 | 104 |
| 3 | 27 | M | C5-C6 cervical cord compression | Anterior corpectomy | Morphine | Intravenous | 9700 | 104.2 |
| 4 | 45 | M | L4-L5 prolapsed intervertebral disc | Decompression and fusion | Morphine | Intravenous | 8400 | 104.6 |
| 5 | 55 | F | C3-C5 cervical cord compression | Decompression and fixation | Morphine | Intravenous | 10230 | 103.4 |
Criteria for paraneoplastic fever.
| Criteria | |
| I | Temperature over 37.8°C at least once each day |
| II | Duration of fever over two weeks |
| III | Lack of evidence of infection on: |
| A. Physical examination | |
| B. Laboratory examinations, e.g. sputum smears or cultures, cultures of blood, urine, stool, bone marrow, spinal fluid, and discharge from local lesions | |
| C. Imaging studies, e.g. chest radiograph or CT scans of the head, abdomen, and pelvis | |
| IV | Absence of allergic mechanisms, e.g. drug allergy, transfusion reaction, or radiation and chemotherapeutic drug reaction |
| V | Lack of response of fever to an empiric, adequate antibiotic therapy for at least seven days |
| VI | Prompt, complete lysis of fever by the naproxen test with sustained normal temperature while receiving naproxen |
Figure 1Opioid-induced fever pathway.