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Infectious Diseases and Microbiology: Postoperative Fever


Basics
Description
Postoperative fever is defined as a body temperature above 38°C (100.4°F) occurring after an invasive procedure. It is classified by timing: immediate (during surgery or within hours), acute (within the first postoperative week), subacute (1–4 weeks after surgery), and delayed (more than one month postoperatively). Most cases result from the inflammatory response to surgery and resolve spontaneously, but fever may signal a serious complication. Evaluation requires careful history, physical examination, and appropriate laboratory and imaging studies, including cultures and Gram stains when indicated. Early postoperative fever is frequently noninfectious; however, fever persisting beyond 96 hours is more likely infectious. Consider that patients may have been incubating community-acquired infection preoperatively. New or persistent fever beyond four days strongly suggests ongoing pathology or a new complication. Surgical wounds, catheter insertion sites, and all dressings must be inspected, and recent interventions such as blood transfusions reviewed.


Epidemiology
Drug fever is the most common noninfectious cause of postoperative fever, most often linked to antimicrobials and heparin. Pneumonia is a common cause after cardiac surgery and occurs in more than 5% of such patients. Sternal wound infections after cardiothoracic surgery occur in up to 5%, typically around postoperative day seven. Postoperative aspergillosis after cardiothoracic procedures carries very high mortality. Fever alone is a poor predictor of infection, with low sensitivity. Postsurgical mediastinitis has high mortality. In obstetrics and gynecology, bacterial vaginosis may increase postoperative infection risk.


General Prevention
Aggressive pulmonary hygiene, including incentive spirometry and mobilization, reduces pulmonary complications such as atelectasis.


Etiology
Common infectious causes include urinary tract infection, pneumonia, sinusitis, suppurative thrombophlebitis, catheter-related infections, and Clostridioides difficile–associated diarrhea. Noninfectious causes include deep venous thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, subarachnoid hemorrhage, gout, and fat embolism. Surgical site infections are uncommon within the first 1–3 days except for aggressive pathogens such as group A streptococci or clostridia, which can present early. Atelectasis is frequently blamed but likely coincidental rather than causal. Other serious causes include transplant rejection. Drug-induced fever is most often associated with beta-lactams, antiepileptics, and heparin. Inflammatory states such as acute myocardial infarction, pancreatitis, or acute respiratory distress syndrome may produce fever without infection. Endocrine emergencies such as adrenal insufficiency or thyrotoxicosis may also present with fever.


Diagnosis
Physical Examination
Drug fever lacks specific features and usually develops days after medication exposure; rash and eosinophilia are uncommon. Malignant hyperthermia typically occurs intraoperatively but may be delayed up to 24 hours and is associated with agents such as succinylcholine or volatile anesthetics. Neuroleptic malignant syndrome is associated with antipsychotics, particularly haloperidol. Withdrawal syndromes from alcohol, opioids, barbiturates, or benzodiazepines may cause fever hours to days after admission, and prior substance use history may not be readily available.


Diagnostic Tests and Interpretation
Laboratory Studies
Urinalysis and urine culture are recommended in patients with indwelling catheters longer than 72 hours. Procalcitonin has uncertain value in distinguishing bacterial causes of postoperative fever.


Imaging
Duplex ultrasonography with Doppler should be considered for new extremity swelling suggestive of deep venous thrombosis. Routine chest radiography is not required within the first 72 postoperative hours if fever is the only indication.


Diagnostic Procedures/Other
Wound swab cultures are rarely useful unless there is clear clinical evidence of infection. Suspected deep intraabdominal abscess may require imaging and, if inconclusive, surgical exploration.


Treatment
Medications
Antibiotics are generally not indicated for early postoperative fever without evidence of infection. Critically ill patients or those with hemodynamic instability should receive empiric broad-spectrum antibiotics after thorough evaluation, but therapy should be discontinued after 48 hours if no infectious source is identified. Atelectasis management includes coughing exercises, incentive spirometry, chest physiotherapy, beta-2 agonists, intermittent positive-pressure breathing, and nebulization. Empiric antifungal therapy is not recommended initially.


Ongoing Care and Follow-Up
Drug fever is diagnosed by exclusion when other causes are ruled out. Surgical wounds and invasive device sites must be repeatedly examined for signs of infection.


Complications
Postoperative infections increase morbidity and mortality, may lead to sepsis, impair wound healing, and cause respiratory failure and other serious outcomes.


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