Brief clinical and laboratory observationOutpatient bacteremia: Clinical findings in children under two years with initial temperatures of 39.5°C or higher
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Cited by (62)
FEVER WITHOUT SOURCE AND FEVER OF UNKNOWN ORIGIN
2009, Feigin and Cherry's Textbook of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Sixth EditionEvaluation and Management of the Febrile Child in the Conjugated Vaccine Era
2006, Advances in PediatricsCitation Excerpt :The following year, Burke and colleagues [12] reported that in 30 of 111 cases of pneumococcal bacteremia identified in the previous 9 years, the bacteremia was occult or unsuspected and was associated with upper respiratory tract infection, fever, and leukocytosis. With the phenomenon of occult bacteremia established, the stage was set for studies to determine the prevalence, the population at risk, and risk factors [13–26]. In the early 1970s, investigators at the Boston City Hospital ambulatory (walk-in) clinic conducted two such studies [15,19].
Evaluation of the infant with fever without source: An evidence based approach
1999, Emergency Medicine Clinics of North AmericaPredictors of occult pneumococcal bacteremia in young febrile children
1998, Annals of Emergency MedicinePneumococcal bacteremia and sepsis in children : A multi-center study in france
1994, Medecine et Maladies Infectieuses
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