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If it's mild, hands off. Some doctors believe a mild fever (under 100°F in adults) should not be treated. "Taking antipyretics such as aspirin or acetaminophen (Tylenol) brings down the fever, but there's also some evidence that immune activity is suppressed," says Donna McCarthy, Ph.D., assistant professor of nursing at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Don't be stoic--pop a pill. On the other hand, there's no good proof that not treating fever helps your recovery, says Thomas Rosenthal, M.D., associate professor of family medicine at the State University of New York at Buffalo. "Let your comfort be your guide," says Dr. Rosenthal. "If you have headache or muscle aches, by all means take an aspirin or acetaminophen. Both are equally effective, and you should feel effects in a half-hour." (Children should be" given only child-size doses of acetaminophen: Aspirin is not advised by pediatricians because of its link to Reye's syndrome, a potentially fatal neurological disease.)
Have a massage. If you go the nondrug route, having a massage and listening to soothing music helps boost comfort, says Dr. McCarthy. A warm bath is best. "The old-fashioned advice to immerse a fevered person in cold water is outdated," says Dr. Rosenthal. "A cold bath makes the body temperature drop too quickly. You'll shiver--which raises your temperature even more, because the rapid muscle movement generates body heat." For the same reason, he adds, you should avoid alcohol rubs, which also cool the skin too quickly. Fill 'er up. With fever, your system is pumped up, and you lose double or triple your normal water loss without even knowing it, says Dr. Rosenthal. Drinking lots of liquid makes it easier to sweat and get rid of the heat. Back off from heavy exercise. Both fever and exercise boost your body's heat production, making your heart work harder. Also, if you can't lose the extra heat fast enough, heat exhaustion could result. "The 'work' of fever is enough of a workout to skip exercise for a day," says Herbert Keating, M.D., chief of medicine at the Veterans Administration Medical Center in Des Moines, Iowa.
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