Fever can be a friend

Raised body temperature isn’t always a bad thing; it’s usually a strong ally against illness

Oh, no. My child has a fever. Quick, call the doctor. Go to the emergency room.

Get out the medicines to bring the temperature down.

That’s what most parents have been taught to do when their child feels hot and feverish. But is that the best way to react?

In most cases, no, doctors now say.

In fact, with some exceptions, fevers are usually good for sick children, encouraging them to rest and sleep.

Tell that, though, to Esmeralda Garcia, 27, of Anaheim, Calif., who worries as most mothers do whenever her 4-year-old son, Eli, has a fever.

“I’m the person at 2 in the morning calling the after-hours nurse with one foot out the door to the ER,” she said.

“I drive my husband crazy with the old wives’ tales and home remedies,” Garcia said. “I called my mom and told her he had a fever and she said, ‘Slice some tomatoes and put them on the bottom of his feet because it has a cooling effect.’ So I did and then put socks on him.” Did it work? She’s not sure, but his fever did come down.

“Was it the tomato slices or the fever breaking?” she wondered.

A fever is a body temperature above normal. In children, this is considered 100.4 degrees on a rectal thermometer or 99.5 on an oral thermometer or 99 under the arm, according to MedlinePlus, a service of the U.S. National Library of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health.

The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that parents use fever-reducing medicines only to make a fussy child more comfortable, not merely to lower the body temperature. And parents should not wake up a sleeping child to give fever medication, the academy advises, as sleep is more important to the healing process.

“Fever … is not the primary illness but is a physiologic mechanism that has beneficial effects in fighting infection,” according to a 2011 study by the pediatrics academy, which also reported that half of parents surveyed gave the wrong dosage of fever medicines. “There is no evidence that fever itself worsens the course of an illness or that it causes long-term neurologic complications.”

In fact, the study found that fever tends to retard the growth of bacteria and viruses, pump up the body’s natural immune system and help patients recover more quickly from viral infections.

BAKED BRAINS?

So what about dire warnings from generations of mothers about brains being cooked by too-high temperatures?

“I always heard you get brain damage and seizures from high fevers,” Garcia said.

But, depending on age and general health, an older child can be feverish for as long as three days before it becomes worrisome. If a child needs to be seen by a doctor, it’s to diagnose an underlying cause, not to lower the fever itself.

Dr. Behnoosh Afghani, clinical professor of pediatrics at the University of California-Irvine, said most fevers are caused by viruses, which can’t be treated by antibiotics, so parents who pack the emergency room demanding them will be disappointed.

THINK TWICE

Of course, there are times when a trip to the hospital is recommended: Infants under age 3 months with fevers of 100.4degrees or higher should see a doctor, because a lack of symptoms may mask serious conditions, said Afghani, who also treats children at Children’s Hospital of Orange County.

“Fever in very young infants is serious,” Afghani said. “You should contact the doctor immediately to see if something serious is going on.”

For older babies, 3 months to 36 months, parents should seek medical help if a fever reaches 102 degrees, and if the child seems fussy or lethargic, is throwing up or can’t hold down foods or liquids, she said.

Children older than 3 years old can tolerate fevers up to 104 before they need to see a doctor, unless they seem very ill, aren’t holding down liquids, are throwing up frequently, or have severe abdominal pain that may indicate a condition such as appendicitis, or a severe headache, which can be a symptom of meningitis.

A fever lasting more than three days should be attended to by a medical professional.

Parents of children with underlying health issues such as cancer or heart problems should always consult their physicians in the event of a fever.

FEBRILE SEIZURES

Occasionally, fevers will trigger “febrile” seizures in children under 5. However, these tend to be hereditary and aren’t necessarily related to how hot the child gets.

Sarah Bardowell of Mission Viejo, Calif., said her son Elijah was 4 and his temperature hadn’t hit 100 degrees when he suddenly went into seizure.

“I put him into bed with me about 8:30 or 9 p.m.,” Bardowell recalled. “He started shivering violently and then flopping around like a fish. I couldn’t get him to stop. I put him by the front door and called the paramedics.”

The whole episode lasted about 45 seconds, Bardowell said, although it seemed an eternity. Elijah stopped convulsing, went back to shivering, and then opened his eyes. Paramedics took him to the hospital, where he was released within hours.

Although such seizures terrify parents, they are not usually dangerous in and of themselves, Afghani said, and they end quickly.

“It was really scary,” Bardowell said. Her middle son,Jonah, who tended to get such high temperatures that he would walk into walls, never went into seizure.

She remembers that as a child she would also get very hot. “I would actually hallucinate,” Bardowell said. “My mom told me the fear back then was that your brain would cook.”

Fortunately, that’s something doctors no longer believe can happen.

Family, Pages 34 on 03/05/2014

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