French term
T
In a FR patient's hospital report, we are told the following:
Patient conscious but disorientated, Glasgow Coma Scale 14
Haemodynamically stable, fever 38 °C.
BP: 100/59, pulse 87 T: 39 Sat: 99
I would like some help understanding T, please. I don't see how it could be tension (pressure)...
Thanks.
4 +2 | Temperature | Victoria Schmidt |
Nov 9, 2023 22:09: Rachel Fell changed "Level" from "PRO" to "Non-PRO"
Non-PRO (3): Bashiqa, Drmanu49, Rachel Fell
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Proposed translations
Temperature
The 'tension' or blood pressure is already stated at the beginning of the line, 'BP: 100/59'.
Hope this helps.
Thank you, Victoria, for your much appreciated input. :) |
agree |
Emmanuella
2 mins
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agree |
philgoddard
: This seems likely, but then why does it also say 'fever 38'? Does that mean they define fever as 38?
25 mins
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Discussion
https://www.practo.com/consult/oxygen-saturation-i-had-oxyge...
During exercise with an inspired O2 fraction of 0.21, the arterial CO2 pressure (35 +/- 1 mmHg; mean +/- SE) and O2 pressure (77 +/- 2 mmHg) as well as the haemoglobin saturation (91.9 +/- 0.7%) were reduced (P < 0.05).
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10484427/
There is no single agreed-upon upper limit for normal temperature: sources use values ranging between 37.2 and 38.3 °C (99.0 and 100.9 °F) in humans.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fever
I would call 38 °C 'hyperthermia'.