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In [[medicine]], the '''Faget [[sign (medicine)|sign]]''' — sometimes called '''sphygmothermic dissociation''' — is the unusual pairing of [[fever]] with [[bradycardia]] (slow [[pulse]]). (Fever is usually accompanied by [[tachycardia]] (rapid pulse), an association known by the [[eponym]] "[[Liebermeister's rule]]".) The Faget sign is named after Louisiana physician [[Jean Charles Faget]], who studied |
In [[medicine]], the '''Faget [[sign (medicine)|sign]]''' — sometimes called '''sphygmothermic dissociation''' — is the unusual pairing of [[fever]] with [[bradycardia]] (slow [[pulse]]). (Fever is usually accompanied by [[tachycardia]] (rapid pulse), an association known by the [[eponym]] "[[Liebermeister's rule]]".) The Faget sign is named after Louisiana physician [[Jean Charles Faget]], who studied [[yellow fever]] in Louisiana.<ref>{{WhoNamedIt|synd|3753}}</ref><ref>Jean-Charles Faget. Études médicale de quelques questions importantes pour la Louisiane, et exposé succinct d’une endémie paludéenne de forme catarrhale qui a sévi à la Nouvelle-Orléans, particulièrement sur les enfants, pendant l’epidémie de fièvre jaune de 1858. New Orleans, 1859.</ref> |
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Faget sign is often seen in: |
Faget sign is often seen in: |
Revision as of 18:16, 13 August 2017
In medicine, the Faget sign — sometimes called sphygmothermic dissociation — is the unusual pairing of fever with bradycardia (slow pulse). (Fever is usually accompanied by tachycardia (rapid pulse), an association known by the eponym "Liebermeister's rule".) The Faget sign is named after Louisiana physician Jean Charles Faget, who studied yellow fever in Louisiana.[1][2]
Faget sign is often seen in:
- Yellow fever
- Typhoid Fever
- Tularaemia
- Brucellosis
- Colorado tick fever
- Some pneumonias - Legionella pneumonia and Mycoplasma pneumonia
- Drug Fever (e.g. Beta-Blockers,[3] known as the Beta-Faget sign)
Of note, the Faget sign in bacterial infections is consistently associated with bacteria that have an intracellular life cycle.
References
- ^ synd/3753 at Who Named It?
- ^ Jean-Charles Faget. Études médicale de quelques questions importantes pour la Louisiane, et exposé succinct d’une endémie paludéenne de forme catarrhale qui a sévi à la Nouvelle-Orléans, particulièrement sur les enfants, pendant l’epidémie de fièvre jaune de 1858. New Orleans, 1859.
- ^ Neuroimmunomodulation. 1999 Jul-Aug;6(4):305-17. Beta-adrenergic receptor subtype effects on stress fever and thermoregulation. Mayfield KP, Soszynski D, Kozak W, Kozak A, Rudolph K, Kluger MJ.