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Chapter List For:
The Doctors Book of Home Remedies for Seniors:
  1. Care for Your Health
  2. Get Your Exercise
  3. Balance Your Diet
  4. Prevent Accidents
  5. Stay Mentally Sharp
  6. Aches and Pains
  7. Age Spots
  8. Anemia
  9. Angina
  10. Arm Flab
  11. Arthritis
  12. Asthma
  13. Back Pain
  14. Bad Breath
  15. Bedsores
  16. Body Odor
  17. Bone Spurs
  18. Brittle Nails
  19. Bruises
  20. Bunions
  21. Burns
  22. Bursitis and Tendinitis
  23. Caffeine Dependency
  24. Canker Sores
  25. Clumsiness
  26. Cold Hands and Feet
  27. Colds
  28. Cold Sores
  29. Constipation
  30. Corns and Calluses
  31. Coughing
  32. Crows-Feet
  33. Cuts and Scrapes
  34. Cysts and Sties
  35. Dehydration
  36. Denture Pain
  37. Depression
  38. Diabetes
  39. Diarrhea
  40. Diverticulosis
  41. Dizziness
  42. Dry Eyes
  43. Dry Hair
  44. Dry Hands
  45. Dry Mouth
  46. Dry Skin
  47. Earaches
  48. Ear Hair
  49. Earwax
  50. Eczema
  51. Emphysema
  52. Eyestrain
  53. Fatigue
  54. Fears and Anxiety
  55. Fever
  56. Flatulence
  57. Food Poisoning
  58. Foot Odor
  59. Foot Pain
  60. Fragile Skin
  61. Gallstones
  62. Glaucoma
  63. Gout
  64. Grief
  65. Gum Problems and Tooth Loss
  66. Hair Loss
  67. Hammertoes
  68. Headache
  69. Hearing Loss
  70. Heartburn
  71. Heart Palpitations
  72. Heat Exhaustion
  73. Hemorrhoids
  74. High Blood Pressure
  75. High Cholesterol
  76. Hip Pain
  77. Hives
  78. Impotence
  79. Incontinence
  80. Ingrown Toenails
  81. Insomnia
  82. Intermittent Claudication
  83. Irritability
  84. Jaw Pain and Tmd
  85. Laryngitis
  86. Lowered Sexual Desire
  87. Lyme Disease
  88. Macular Degeneration
  89. Memory Loss
  90. Mobility Problems
  91. Morning Aches and Pains
  92. Mouth Sores
  93. Muscle Soreness
  94. Nausea
  95. Neck Pain
  96. Neuroma
  97. Night Vision Problems
  98. Nosebleeds
  99. Numbness and Tingling
  100. Osteoporosis
  101. Overweight
  102. Phlebitis
  103. Pneumonia
  104. Poor Appetite
  105. Poor Concentration
  106. Poor Smell and Taste
  107. Prostate Problems
  108. Rashes
  109. Reading Problems
  110. Restless Legs Syndrome
  111. Rosacea
  112. Scars
  113. Sciatica
  114. Shingles
  115. Sleep Interruptions
  116. Slowed Reaction Time
  117. Slow Healing
  118. Smoking Addiction
  119. Snoring and Sleep Apnea
  120. Stomachache
  121. Stress
  122. Sunburn
  123. Television Addiction
  124. Tinnitus
  125. Toenail Fungus
  126. Toothache
  127. Tooth Stains
  128. Ulcers
  129. Underweight
  130. Urinary Tract Infections
  131. Varicose Veins
From the Rodale book, The Doctors Book of Home Remedies for Seniors:
Edit id 1449

Fever


Previous Chapter Fears and Anxiety
Next Chapter Endometriosis


Fever

When you’re older and you get sick, you may not feel as hot as you used to. Literally. “Older people usually don’t get as high fevers as young people do in the presence of infection. A person in her twenties or thirties might have a temperature of 104°F, but an older person might have 101°F or maybe only 99°F,” says Peter V. Lee, M.D., professor emeritus of family medicine at the University of Southern California School of Medicine in Los Angeles.

Why that’s the case is a bit of a mystery. Certain medications, such as sedatives or antitremor drugs for Parkinson’s disease, can inhibit your body’s ability to generate a fever, says Thomas C. Rosenthal, M.D., professor and chairman of the department of family medicine at the State University of New York in Buffalo. Mostly, though, it’s just natural for older people to run lower fevers when they’re sick.

Even a low fever is one you have to watch, however. For someone over 60, a temperature reading that hovers around 100°F for more than 24 hours could be a sign of a high-grade illness or infection and warrants a visit to the doctor, says Dr. Lee. “A fever is the same thing as rapid heart rate or elevation of blood pressure. It’s a signal that something is wrong,” he says.

If you do have a mild fever caused by a cold or flu, here are some suggestions to make you more comfortable.

Try This First

Keep up with the fluids. A fever can cause you to lose almost an extra quart of fluid a day, Dr. Rosenthal says. So make sure you drink eight or more eight-ounce glasses of fluid per day. Plain old water is the best, but juices and clear sodas can also help you keep hydrated. Avoid liquids that have caffeine or a lot of sugar in them. They can actually cause you to lose more water in the long run.

Other Wise Ways

Take two and.......you know. Take two regular or extra-strength acetaminophen or aspirin. These medications can bring the fever down and make you more comfortable, Dr. Rosenthal says. Non steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) such as ibuprofen can also help and may hold the fever down longer.

Don’t overdo exercise. If you already exercise, you can continue to do so even while you have a low fever. But don’t overdo it. You can’t sweat out a fever. If you normally run or jog, switch to a walking pace when you’re sick. “Go ahead and move, but don’t push yourself,” advises Dr. Rosenthal.

Managing Your Meds

If you’re allergic to a medication, one of the ways your body will tell you is through fever. But it won’t always happen right away, says Peter V. Lee, professor emeritus of family medicine at the University of Southern California School of Medicine in Los Angeles. If you develop an unexplained fever, sometimes accompanied by a rash or joint pain, within 7 to 10 days after taking a new drug regularly, you might be allergic to it. Talk to your doctor immediately about a substitute.

If you’re taking aspirin for your fever, it’s important to remember that many medications may interact with it, warns W. Steven Pray, Ph.D., R.Ph., professor of nonprescription drug products at Southwestern Oklahoma State University in Weatherford.

Take a quick dip. If you’re feeling uncomfortable and want to cool off, give yourself a sponge bath or a good soak in the tub but keep the water lukewarm. You don’t want to plunge into a very cold or very hot shower, because that could make you feel dizzy and affect your balance, says Susan Black, M.D., doctor in private practice in Tewksbury, Massachusetts. If you have a fever, the lukewarm water will actually feel cool and soothing.

Don’t starve a fever. Starving yourself while you have a fever won’t really affect the fever, but it can make you feel weaker and sicker. Although you may not have very much appetite when you’re sick, do try to eat a little something, even if it’s only a cup of broth and some crackers. “If the food doesn’t upset your stomach, it’s fine to eat,” Dr. Black says.

Figure out what your base temperature is. Because people over 60 can run temperatures that are cooler than younger adults, it pays to learn what your normal temperature is when you’re not sick. Dr. Black suggests that you take your temperature when you are well for a week, every morning and again after 4:00 p.m. each day to get a sense of what’s normal for you. A problematic fever is two points or more above your normal temperature.

Previous Chapter Fears and Anxiety
Next Chapter Endometriosis

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