Guest guest Posted November 8, 2010 Report Share Posted November 8, 2010 Just wanted to add - my son had great responses to Pneumovax at 1 month. At 2 1/2 months he lost almost all protective levels. You might want to retest at 3 months, then 6 months. ________________________________ From: Jefferson <jamie@...> Sent: Fri, November 5, 2010 12:13:45 PM Subject: RE: confusion on fevers  HI, He has been to Children’s Oakland for evaluation for IVIG. The immunologist there ran a lot of tests which turned up the Specific Antibody Deficiency (no titers to tetanus, prevnar, and one other) and is probably a reason he gets sick so much. However, when they gave him pnuemovax as a test, he had a great response (not sure exactly what it was, but that was how it was described to me). She referred us to rheumatology about the rising ANA numbers and fevers. She didn’t know the significance of that test, but according to rheumatology, his limping must be arthralgias and not arthritis because there is no evidence of it in his joints. (he did have one year long documented auto immune arthritis episode, SED rate is now within normal range). After being on this group & reading some postings, I wrote to her and asked to retest his titer for pnuemovax in six months or a year to see if it holds steady or if he is losing his responsiveness. They do not think he needs IG at this time. We are set for retest in November. He has no active sinusitis. He does have chronic asthma and coughing. He had pneumonia twice last year. I feel like we/he are sort of on the fence and I don’t know when or which way it will go. I was hoping the fevers with no other symptoms was a sign of progress. I will look into the periodic fever syndrome. I have not heard of it. Also he gets fevers when it is hot out. Thanks for your help. From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Barbara Jimenez Sent: Thursday, November 04, 2010 10:54 PM Subject: Re: confusion on fevers He sounds like he has a classic immune disorder. Has he seen an Immunologist at a major university or Childrens Hospital setting? How old is he? The symptoms you describe are the ones most kids with PIDD present with and in many cases are treated by Gamma Globulin and have MUCH better quality of life. If he were my child I would try to get him a second opinion to see if there is anything else you can do to protect his body for the future. BARBIE ________________________________ From: Jefferson <jamie@... <mailto:jamie%40jefferson.org> > <mailto:%40> Sent: Thu, November 4, 2010 10:41:30 PM Subject: confusion on fevers Hello, I've been following the thread on Lacey and her recurrent fevers. I have no answers to offer --but do express my sympathies. Reading the posts on fevers led me to a question that I thought I would ask the group because everyone seems to know so much about medicine. My son who has no formal PID diagnosis but has immune system irregularities (low IGG, specific antibody deficiencies, constant URIs) and inflammatory bowel disease, has recurrent high fevers with no other symptoms. They typically come on quickly and last about two to three days with fevers up to 104. We give him motrin, and the fever drops but comes back for a couple days. This started about a year ago. I thought this was progress in that at least he wasn't getting sick ie. Coming down with something -- that perhaps his body is responding to a virus and fighting it off and a sign his immune system is working better? Is this possible? Or is it a problem/unusual? I would also add that we have seen two rheumatologists because he has a history of auto immune arthritis (high ESR, Pos and climbing ANA) and the episodes do often coincide with limping but no swelling. Neither of them were impressed and send us home, telling me not to worry. I virtually never see our pediatrician as they do not offer much assistance or help. They would also just tell me its nothing. Is this something to worry about? Thanks, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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