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eRAM

encyclopedia of Rare Disease Annotation for Precision Medicine




Disease hyperthermia
Symptom C0015230|skin rash
Sentences 14
PubMedID- 25844264 On admission to our hospital, thrombocytopenia was not shown in the patient, and skin rash unlike that of dengue developed with fever subsiding on the fifth day.
PubMedID- 21496328 The child remained well and apyretic for 7 days, then fever recurred, associated with irritability, tachycardia, skin rash on physical examination, and rcp at 239 mg/l (normal range 0 - 5 in our laboratory) and further increase of platelets (1170000/mm3) on laboratory investigations.
PubMedID- 21286026 Drug fever is commonly associated with skin rash and blood eosinophilia (4), which were also observed in the present case.
PubMedID- 22345792 3 it has since been known as drug hypersensitivity syndrome and is now more often referred to as dress syndrome which is a specific, severe, idiosyncratic drug reaction characterized by skin rash with fever, facial edema, lymphadenopathy, and visceral involvement (hepatitis, pneumonitis, myocarditis, nephritis, and colitis).
PubMedID- 25938071 Acute onset of skin rash with fever over 38℃.
PubMedID- 22734944 Initial manifestations were fever with skin rash in 14 patients, fever, skin rash and sore throat in two, skin rash in one and arthralgia in one.
PubMedID- 26286340 The most commonly identified adrs were abdominal pain, skin rash, shortness of breath, fever, upper gastrointestinal bleeding and vomiting.
PubMedID- 23543400 A high fever developed abruptly with a skin rash.
PubMedID- 25191055 Immunization history was upto date, but she had suffered from fever with skin rashes 2 weeks before her presentation, which was suggestive of chicken pox.
PubMedID- 22242067 We present an interesting case of dengue fever with headache, skin rash and abnormal behaviour who had a massive intracranial haemorrhage with fatal outcome.
PubMedID- 26519419 Dress syndrome is a severe adverse drug-induced reaction presenting as a diffuse maculopapular skin rash with fever, hematological abnormalities (leukocytosis, eosinophilia, and/or atypical lymphocytosis), and multiorgan involvement.
PubMedID- 25399980 All cases developed skin rashes with fever within 14 to 60 days (n = 10).
PubMedID- 23231599 Treatment was stopped after approximately 3 weeks when she developed a skin rash with associated fever and flu-like symptoms.
PubMedID- 22198412 The first 10 patients were enrolled between march 2007 and may 2007. a total of 54 aes were reported; 53 (98%) were grade 1 or 2. as the initial 10-patient cohort had only 1 dlt (grade 3 skin rash with grade 1 fever), the study was opened to full recruitment.

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