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For other uses, please see Fever (disambiguation). This article or section recently underwent a major revision or rewrite and needs further review. You can help! A medical/clinical thermometer showing the temperature of 38.7 °C Fever (also known as pyrexia, or a febrile response from the Latin word febris meaning fever, and archaically known as ague) is a frequent medical symptom that describes an increase in internal body temperature to levels that are above normal (37°C, 98 ...
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Resources
- Acetaminophen: Childhood Use and Misuse (Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research)
- Aromatherapy and Children (HealthWorld)
- Childhood Fever (HealthWorld)
- Children and Fevers: What Parents Should Know (American College of Emergency Physicians)
- Clinical Guidelines Used to Treat Infants with Fevers May Not Improve Outcomes (Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality)
- ClinicalTrials.gov: Fever (National Institutes of Health)
- Early Fevers Associated with Lower Allergy Risk Later in Childhood (National Institutes of Health)
- Febrile Seizures (National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Stroke)
- Febrile Seizures (National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke)
- Febrile Seizures Information Page (National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Stroke)
- Fever (MayoClinic)
- Fever (American Academy of Family Physicians)
- Fever (National Institutes of Health)
- Fever (Cleveland Clinic)
- Fever (Cleveland Clinic)
- Fever (HealthWorld)
- Fever (HealthWorld)
- Fever (HealthWorld)
- Fever (Medline Plus)
- Fever As Healer (HealthWorld)
- Fever in Infants and Children (American Academy of Family Physicians)
- Fever, Sweats, and Hot Flashes (PDQ) (National Cancer Institute)
- Genetics Home Reference: Mediterranean fever, familial (National Library Medicine)
- Home Treatment of Fever (American Academy of Pediatrics)
- How to Choose and Use a Thermometer (Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research)
- How to Take Your Temperature (Cleveland Clinic)
- Ibuprofen Dosage Chart (American Academy of Pediatrics)
- Kids' Guide to Fever (Nemours Foundation)
- National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
- PDQ-Supportive Care-Patients: Fever, Sweats, and Hot Flashes (National Cancer Institute)
- Taking Your Child's Temperature (Nemours Foundation)

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