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Posts in ‘fever’

Infection

Apr 25

Some types of chemotherapy make it harder for your bone marrow to produce new white blood cells. White blood cells help your body fight infection. Therefore, it is important to avoid infections, since chemotherapy decreases the number of your white blood cells.

There are many types of white blood cells. One type is called neutrophil. When your neutrophil count is low, it is called neutropenia. Your doctor or nurse may do blood tests to find out whether you have neutropenia.

It is important to watch for signs of infection when you have neutropenia. Check for fever at least once a day, or as often as your doctor or nurse tells you to. You may find it best to use a digital thermometer. Call your doctor or nurse if your temperature is 100.5°F or higher.

  • Your doctor or nurse will check your white blood cell count throughout your treatment. If chemotherapy is likely to make your white blood cell count very low, you may get medicine to raise your white blood cell count and lower your risk of infection.
  • Wash your hands often with soap and water. Be sure to wash your hands before cooking and eating, and after you use the bathroom, blow your nose, cough, sneeze, or touch animals. Carry hand sanitizer for times when you are not near soap and water.
  • Use sanitizing wipes to clean surfaces and items that you touch. This includes public telephones, ATM machines, doorknobs, and other common items.
  • Be gentle and thorough when you wipe yourself after a bowel movement. Instead of toilet paper, use a baby wipe or squirt of water from a spray bottle to clean yourself. Let your doctor or nurse know if your rectal area is sore or bleeds or if you have hemorrhoids.
  • Stay away from people who are sick. This includes people with colds, flu, measles, or chicken pox. You also need to stay away from children who just had a “live virus” vaccine for chicken pox or polio. Call your doctor, nurse, or local health department if you have any questions.
  • Stay away from crowds. Try not to be around a lot of people. For instance, plan to go shopping or to the movies when the stores and theaters are less crowded.
  • Be careful not to cut or nick yourself. Do not cut or tear your nail cuticles. Use an electric shaver instead of a razor. And be extra careful when using scissors, needles, or knives.
  • Watch for signs of infection around your catheter. Signs include drainage, redness, swelling, or soreness. Let your doctor or nurse know about any changes you notice near your catheter.
  • Maintain good mouth care. Brush your teeth after meals and before you go to bed. Use a very soft toothbrush. You can make the bristles even softer by running hot water over them just before you brush. Use a mouth rinse that does not contain alcohol. Check with your doctor or nurse before going to the dentist. (For more about taking care of your mouth, see Mouth and Throat Changes.)
  • Take good care of your skin. Do not squeeze or scratch pimples. Use lotion to soften and heal dry, cracked skin. Dry yourself after a bath or shower by gently patting (not rubbing) your skin. (For more information about taking care of your skin, see Skin and Nail Changes.)
  • Clean cuts right away. Use warm water, soap, and an antiseptic to clean your cuts. Do this every day until your cut has a scab over it.
  • Be careful around animals. Do not clean your cat’s litter box, pick up dog waste, or clean bird cages or fish tanks. Be sure to wash your hands after touching pets and other animals.
  • Do not get a flu shot or other type of vaccine without first asking your doctor or nurse. Some vaccines contain a live virus, which you should not be exposed to.
  • Keep hot foods hot and cold foods cold. Do not leave leftovers sitting out. Put them in the refrigerator as soon as you are done eating.

  • Wash raw vegetables and fruits well before eating them.
  • Do not eat raw or undercooked fish, seafood, meat, chicken, or eggs. These may have bacteria that can cause infection.
  • Do not have food or drinks that are moldy, spoiled, or past the freshness date.
  • Call your doctor right away (even on the weekend or in the middle of the night) if you think you have an infection. Be sure you know how to reach your doctor after office hours and on weekends. Call if you have a fever of 100.5°F or higher, or when you have chills or sweats. Do not take aspirin, acetaminophen (such as Tylenol®), ibuprofen products, or any other drugs that reduce fever without first talking with your doctor or nurse. Other signs of infection include:
    • Redness
    • Swelling
    • Rash
    • Chills
    • Cough
    • Earache
    • Headache
    • Stiff neck
    • Bloody or cloudy urine
    • Painful or frequent need to urinate
    • Sinus pain or pressure

White Blood Cell Booster May Help Cancer Patients Avoid Deadly Complications

Apr 25

ScienceDaily (Jul. 26, 2007) — Cancer patients who receive a drug that stimulates the growth of infection-fighting white blood cells may be significantly less likely to die from a chemotherapy-related complication characterized by fever and low white blood cell levels, according to a multi-institutional study led by researchers from the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry and the Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center.

“Chemotherapy drugs target cancer cells, but they can affect healthy cells as well, including infection-fighting white blood cells,” said Nicole M. Kuderer, M.D., a hematology-oncology fellow at Duke and lead author on the publication. “When patients’ white blood cell counts drop too low, they are at risk for dangerous infections that can cause death.”

Often, chemotherapy must be delayed, reduced in strength or halted when a patient’s white blood cell count is too low, potentially leading to poorer outcomes, she added.

“Patients taking a drug known as granulocyte colony-stimulating factor early in their chemotherapy were about half as likely to develop dangerously low white blood cell counts with fever, and half as likely to die from infection,” Kuderer said. “This study represents an important part of the effort to better treat this common complication in cancer patients receiving chemotherapy.”

The researchers published their findings in the July 20, 2007 issue of the Journal of Clinical Oncology. The work was part of research being conducted by the Awareness of Neutropenia in Chemotherapy (ANC) Study Group, a multi-institution, university-based network of investigators whose work is unrestrictedly funded by Amgen, the maker of a commonly utilized white blood cell booster that goes by the names Neupogen and Neulasta. Kuderer also receives funding from the National Institutes of Health.

This study compiled the results of 17 trials involving more than 3,000 patients receiving chemotherapy of varying intensity to treat several different types of cancers. The researchers found that nearly 40 percent of the patients who did not receive the white blood cell booster early in treatment developed the fever and low white blood cell levels called febrile neutropenia, compared to only 22 percent of the patients who took the drug in conjunction with their chemotherapy, Kuderer said.

While white blood cell boosters were known to help patients receiving very intense doses of chemotherapy, this study showed that the drugs are also a benefit to cancer patients receiving more common chemotherapy doses, Kuderer said.

Recently revised American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) and National Comprehensive Cancer Center Network (NCCN) guidelines for the use of drugs such as Neulasta and Neupogen align with the conclusions reached by this study.

“The new guidelines recommend using these types of drugs when at-risk patients begin chemotherapy, rather than waiting for complications to develop,” said Jeffrey Crawford, M.D., chief of the division of medical oncology at Duke and one of the study’s investigators. “The new recommendations also suggest that we need better methods to identify patients who are at higher risk of developing febrile neutropenia, and future studies will be aimed at doing just that.”

White blood cell boosters can have side effects, including bone pain, which need to be reviewed and discussed with each patient, Crawford said.

Other investigators on the study include Gary Lyman of Duke and David Dale of the University of Washington.

Duke University Medical Center (2007, July 26). White Blood Cell Booster May Help Cancer Patients Avoid Deadly Complications. ScienceDaily. Retrieved December 4, 2007, from http://www.sciencedaily.com­ /releases/2007/07/070725110020.htm

Infection

Dec 09

Some types of chemotherapy make it harder for your bone marrow to produce new white blood cells. White blood cells help your body fight infection. Therefore, it is important to avoid infections, since chemotherapy decreases the number of your white blood cells.

There are many types of white blood cells. One type is called neutrophil. When your neutrophil count is low, it is called neutropenia. Your doctor or nurse may do blood tests to find out whether you have neutropenia.

It is important to watch for signs of infection when you have neutropenia. Check for fever at least once a day, or as often as your doctor or nurse tells you to. You may find it best to use a digital thermometer. Call your doctor or nurse if your temperature is 100.5°F or higher.

  • Your doctor or nurse will check your white blood cell count throughout your treatment. If chemotherapy is likely to make your white blood cell count very low, you may get medicine to raise your white blood cell count and lower your risk of infection.
  • Wash your hands often with soap and water. Be sure to wash your hands before cooking and eating, and after you use the bathroom, blow your nose, cough, sneeze, or touch animals. Carry hand sanitizer for times when you are not near soap and water.
  • Use sanitizing wipes to clean surfaces and items that you touch. This includes public telephones, ATM machines, doorknobs, and other common items.
  • Be gentle and thorough when you wipe yourself after a bowel movement. Instead of toilet paper, use a baby wipe or squirt of water from a spray bottle to clean yourself. Let your doctor or nurse know if your rectal area is sore or bleeds or if you have hemorrhoids.
  • Stay away from people who are sick. This includes people with colds, flu, measles, or chicken pox. You also need to stay away from children who just had a “live virus” vaccine for chicken pox or polio. Call your doctor, nurse, or local health department if you have any questions.
  • Stay away from crowds. Try not to be around a lot of people. For instance, plan to go shopping or to the movies when the stores and theaters are less crowded.
  • Be careful not to cut or nick yourself. Do not cut or tear your nail cuticles. Use an electric shaver instead of a razor. And be extra careful when using scissors, needles, or knives.
  • Watch for signs of infection around your catheter. Signs include drainage, redness, swelling, or soreness. Let your doctor or nurse know about any changes you notice near your catheter.
  • Maintain good mouth care. Brush your teeth after meals and before you go to bed. Use a very soft toothbrush. You can make the bristles even softer by running hot water over them just before you brush. Use a mouth rinse that does not contain alcohol. Check with your doctor or nurse before going to the dentist.
  • Take good care of your skin. Do not squeeze or scratch pimples. Use lotion to soften and heal dry, cracked skin. Dry yourself after a bath or shower by gently patting (not rubbing) your skin.
  • Clean cuts right away. Use warm water, soap, and an antiseptic to clean your cuts. Do this every day until your cut has a scab over it.
  • Be careful around animals. Do not clean your cat’s litter box, pick up dog waste, or clean bird cages or fish tanks. Be sure to wash your hands after touching pets and other animals.
  • Do not get a flu shot or other type of vaccine without first asking your doctor or nurse. Some vaccines contain a live virus, which you should not be exposed to.
  • Keep hot foods hot and cold foods cold. Do not leave leftovers sitting out. Put them in the refrigerator as soon as you are done eating.

  • Wash raw vegetables and fruits well before eating them.
  • Do not eat raw or undercooked fish, seafood, meat, chicken, or eggs. These may have bacteria that can cause infection.
  • Do not have food or drinks that are moldy, spoiled, or past the freshness date.
  • Call your doctor right away (even on the weekend or in the middle of the night) if you think you have an infection. Be sure you know how to reach your doctor after office hours and on weekends. Call if you have a fever of 100.5°F or higher, or when you have chills or sweats. Do not take aspirin, acetaminophen (such as Tylenol®), ibuprofen products, or any other drugs that reduce fever without first talking with your doctor or nurse. Other signs of infection include:
    • Redness
    • Swelling
    • Rash
    • Chills
    • Cough
    • Earache
    • Headache
    • Stiff neck
    • Bloody or cloudy urine
    • Painful or frequent need to urinate
    • Sinus pain or pressure

Fever

Dec 07

Fever is a body temperature of more than 100.5°F taken by mouth that lasts for one or more days. Fever is usually caused by an infection. Infections can be viral (in which case the symptoms can be treated even though there may be no treatment for the cause), or they can be bacterial or fungal (in which case medicines may be prescribed after the infection is diagnosed). Other causes include inflammatory illness, drug reactions, or tumor growth. Sometimes, the cause may not be known. In an infection, the fever is a result of the body “heating up” to try to kill any invading germs. A fever is an important natural defense against germs.

People getting chemo are more likely to have infections because they have lower numbers of the white blood cells needed to fight them (see section on blood counts). It is good to have an easy-to-read, easy-to-use, oral (by mouth) thermometer so you can check your body temperature.

What to Look For

  • Increased skin temperature
  • Feeling warm
  • Feeling tired
  • Headache
  • Feeling cold
  • Body aches
  • Skin rashes
  • Shaking chills
  • Any new area of redness or swelling
  • Pus or yellowish discharge from an injury or other location
  • New cough or shortness of breath
  • New abdominal pain
  • Burning or pain when urinating
  • Sore throat
  • The patient is confused, doesn’t know where he or she is, becomes forgetful, or isn’t making sense (see section on confusion)

What the Patient Can Do

  • Check temperature by mouth every two to three hours. If unable to hold the thermometer in your mouth, put it under your armpit.
  • Keep a record of temperature readings.
  • Drink a lot of liquids (e.g., water, fruit juices, cola, popsicles, and soups).
  • Get enough rest.
  • Cover yourself with a blanket if chilly.
  • Cover yourself only with a sheet if hot.
  • Use a cold compress on the forehead if hot.
  • Take acetaminophen (Tylenol®) or other medicines for fever if prescribed by the doctor.

What Caregivers Can Do

  • Watch for shaking chills, and check the temperature after the shaking stops.
  • Check temperature by placing the thermometer in mouth or under armpit. (Do not take temperature rectally unless the doctor tells you it’s okay.)
  • Encourage visitors who have fevers or the flu to visit the patient by phone until they are well again.
  • Offer extra fluids and snacks.
  • Help the patient take medicines on schedule.
  • Call the doctor if the patient if the patient is confused, doesn’t know where he or she is, becomes forgetful, or isn’t making sense (see section on confusion)

Call the doctor if the patient:

  • has a temperature to 100.5°F or higher, taken by mouth
  • has two or more symptoms listed under “What to Look For”
  • has fever lasting for more than 24 hours
  • has shaking chills
  • cannot take fluids