- Postoperative fever
Postoperative fever is a common condition challenging doctors to find the right diagnosis, because it can be a hallmark of serious underlying conditions.
The most common causes have been summarized in a handy
mnemonic : the five W's. These tend to occur at specific days after surgery (postoperative days or POD).* Wind, POD1-2: the lungs, i.e.
pneumonia , aspiration, and pulmonary embolism, but primarilyatelectasis
* Water, POD3-5:urinary tract infection , related to indwelling catheter (during surgery or currently i.e.Foley catheter )
* Walking (or VEINS, which then sounds like "Weins"), POD4-6:deep vein thrombosis orpulmonary embolism
* Wound, POD5-7: surgical site infection, which inobstetrics orgynaecology , may refer to theuterus .
* Wonder drugs or “What did we do?”, POD7+:drug fever , infections related to intravenous linesNumerous variants on the same theme may exist: sometimes another W for "Wonder why" may indicate an abscess somewhere in the body or the site of surgery. Of course, this list is not comprehensive:
catheter-related sepsis is also frequent, but also easily recognised.Popular Culture
In the first episode of
Grey's Anatomy , Meredith refers to this mnemonic.References
* [http://www.ccjm.org/PDFFILES/Pilesuppl1_06.pdf Evaluating postoperative fever: A focused approach.] J. Pile. Clev Clin J Med. Vol. 73, Suppl. 1, Mar 2006 (PDF file).
* Mark, K. Wax. (2004) "Primary Care Otolaryngology", Chapter 3: postoperative fevers. The American Academy of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery Foundation. , 2nd edition ISBN 978-1-56772-093-8, online at [http://www.entnet.org/education/primary-care.cfm| http://www.entnet.org/education/primary-care.cfm ]
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