SCID-AI · 405 SNS Axis Business Space, Nanpura, Surat
Mon–Sat: 11–1 PM & 4–6 PM
Persistent fever specialist Surat — SCID-AI FUO workup
2+ wks When fever becomes persistent
— and needs specialist investigation
 Symptom Guide · SCID-AI, Surat

Persistent FeverWhat It Means and What to Do

A fever that has lasted more than 2–3 weeks without a clear diagnosis is not “just viral.” It is a signal that the underlying cause has not yet been identified — and that systematic specialist investigation is needed. In India, the most common causes are tuberculosis, hidden infections, lymphoma, and autoimmune conditions. Each requires a different diagnostic pathway.

3–5dViral fever
self-limits
5–14dSeek specialist
assessment
14d+Persistent fever
FUO workup
Understanding Persistent Fever

When Does Fever Become “Persistent”?

Fever becomes persistent — and clinically significant in a different way — when it lasts beyond the expected duration for a self-limiting viral illness. Most viral fevers resolve within 3–7 days. Fever persisting beyond 7–10 days without a clear diagnosis warrants assessment. Fever beyond 3 weeks is the formal threshold for Fever of Unknown Origin (FUO) investigation.

The key clinical distinction is not just duration — it is the absence of a diagnosis. A confirmed dengue patient with fever on day 6 has “persistent fever” in duration but a known cause. The clinically urgent situation is fever of equal duration where the underlying cause remains unidentified after basic investigation — because that is where dangerous but treatable conditions are hiding.

In India, persistent unexplained fever has a different differential than in Western countries. Tuberculosis (particularly extrapulmonary TB with a normal chest X-ray) is the most common cause. Other common Indian causes include: enteric fever presenting atypically, infective endocarditis, liver and intra-abdominal abscesses, visceral leishmaniasis (kala-azar), and brucellosis. These must be excluded before pursuing rarer diagnoses.

Days 1–7
Acute Fever

Usually viral — observe

Days 7–14
Subacute

Seek assessment

14+ days
Persistent / FUO

Systematic specialist workup needed

The Most Common Mistake

Treating persistent fever with repeated courses of antibiotics without a diagnosis. Each antibiotic course sterilises blood cultures, delays diagnosis, selects for drug resistance, and allows the underlying condition to progress. Blood culture before the first antibiotic dose is the single most important action in persistent fever investigation.

Persistent fever specialist SCID-AI Surat

Questions to answer at assessment

Has the patient taken antibiotics? If yes, which ones and for how long?
Has blood culture been sent before any antibiotic? If not, this must be done now.
Is there a potential exposure: travel, flood water, animal contact, unprotected exposure?
Any associated symptoms: weight loss, night sweats, swollen glands, joint pain, rash?
Is the patient immunocompromised: HIV, diabetes, steroids, chemotherapy?
Is there a pattern to the fever: continuous, cyclical, step-ladder, or remittent?
Causes of Persistent Fever

The Three Categories of Fever of Unknown Origin

Persistent fever falls into three broad diagnostic categories. The percentages below reflect the distribution in India — where infectious causes are more common than in Western FUO series, largely due to the TB burden and endemic tropical infections.

40–50%

Infectious Causes

Most common in India — TB leads

Tuberculosis — extrapulmonary TB most commonly missed (lymph node, spine, abdomen, meningeal)
Infective endocarditis — heart valve infection, requires echocardiogram + blood cultures
Liver abscess — amoebic or pyogenic; right upper quadrant pain + fever
Intra-abdominal abscess — post-surgical or spontaneous; CT abdomen essential
Typhoid — atypical or culture-negative presentations; may lack classic features
Brucellosis — unpasteurised milk or animal contact; undulant fever
Visceral leishmaniasis (kala-azar) — endemic areas; splenomegaly + fever + wasting
HIV — primary infection or opportunistic infections; test in all FUO
20–30%

Malignant Causes

Often present as fever before other symptoms

Lymphoma (Hodgkin’s and Non-Hodgkin’s) — most common malignant cause of FUO; Pel-Ebstein fever pattern in Hodgkin’s
Leukaemia — acute or chronic; fever with anaemia, bleeding tendency, lymphadenopathy
Renal cell carcinoma — the classic “internist’s tumour”; fever + haematuria + flank mass
Hepatocellular carcinoma — in chronic HBV or HCV patients; fever + rising AFP
Colon or other solid organ cancer — occult malignancy with systemic inflammatory response
Multiple myeloma — bone pain + anaemia + hypercalcaemia + fever
15–25%

Inflammatory & Autoimmune

Immune system attacking own tissues

Adult-onset Still’s disease (AOSD) — quotidian fever + salmon-coloured rash + arthritis + very high ferritin
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) — young women; malar rash, arthritis, nephritis, ANA positive
Vasculitis — temporal arteritis (elderly, jaw claudication, ESR >100), polyarteritis nodosa
Inflammatory bowel disease — Crohn’s disease with extraintestinal manifestations and fever
Sarcoidosis — bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy + fever + elevated ACE
Drug fever — 1–3 weeks after new drug; resolves within 48–72 hours of stopping
Thyroiditis — subacute thyroiditis with fever + thyroid pain + elevated ESR

5–15% of FUO Remains Undiagnosed

Even after comprehensive specialist investigation, a proportion of persistent fever cases yield no diagnosis. Many of these resolve spontaneously. In these cases, watchful waiting and periodic reassessment is preferable to empirical treatment — which risks treating the wrong condition and potentially masking the true diagnosis when it eventually declares itself.

Tuberculosis — most common cause of persistent fever India
TB & Persistent Fever 2.8M TB cases in India every year — why TB is always the first diagnosis to exclude in persistent fever

Tuberculosis is the most common cause of persistent fever in India and is frequently missed because it presents in ways doctors don’t expect. The classic picture — cough + haemoptysis + weight loss + abnormal chest X-ray — is pulmonary TB, which is the minority of missed TB cases. Extrapulmonary TB presents with persistent fever and a normal chest X-ray.

TB can affect lymph nodes (firm, painless swelling in neck or armpit), spine (back pain with neurological symptoms), abdomen (pain, ascites, altered bowel habit), meninges (headache, neck stiffness), kidneys (sterile pyuria — white cells in urine with no bacteria), pericardium (fever with pericardial effusion), and virtually any other organ. In all these forms, the chest X-ray may be completely normal.

How SCID-AI Excludes TB in Persistent Fever

GeneXpert MTB/RIF on sputum — even if patient has no cough. Collected on two occasions. More sensitive than smear (85–90%).
IGRA (Interferon-Gamma Release Assay) — blood test detecting immune sensitisation to TB. More specific than TST in BCG-vaccinated individuals.
CT chest and abdomen — detects mediastinal lymphadenopathy, miliary nodules, pleural effusion, and abdominal TB that chest X-ray misses.
Ultrasound-guided FNAC or biopsy of enlarged lymph nodes — GeneXpert on the biopsy specimen + histopathology for caseating granulomas.
CSF analysis if TB meningitis is suspected: GeneXpert on CSF, ADA level, lymphocytic pleocytosis.
Urine for AFB culture if renal TB suspected (sterile pyuria on routine urine).

TB Treatment Should Never Be Started Without a Diagnosis

Empirical TB treatment without microbiological confirmation is practiced when clinical suspicion is overwhelming and diagnosis is not feasible. But every effort must be made to obtain a diagnostic specimen first — because drug-resistant TB (MDR/XDR) requires completely different treatment, and a positive culture with DST allows correct drug selection. Dr. Savaj always attempts microbiological confirmation before initiating TB treatment.

Investigation Protocol

How Persistent Fever Is Investigated at SCID-AI

Investigation follows a structured, sequential protocol — not random test ordering. Tests are selected based on clinical probability and are done in phases, with each phase guiding what comes next.

1

First-Line Tests — Day 1 of Assessment

Before any antibiotic
 Blood culture × 2 CBC + differential ESR + CRP LFT + RFT Urine culture Chest X-ray HIV test Malaria smear + RDT ANA screen LDH + uric acid
2

Second-Line — Based on First-Line Results & Clinical Picture

Days 3–7
 GeneXpert sputum IGRA (TB) CT chest + abdomen Echocardiogram Ferritin (AOSD) Anti-dsDNA + anti-Sm ANCA panel RF + anti-CCP Thyroid function + ESR Dengue / Chikungunya IgM Scrub typhus IgM Leptospira IgM Blood film for parasites
3

Third-Line — When Diagnosis Remains Elusive

Week 2–3 if needed
 PET-CT Bone marrow biopsy Lymph node biopsy CT-guided abscess aspirate Liver biopsy CSF analysis (LP) Temporal artery biopsy Bronchoscopy + BAL

Bring All Previous Reports

Previous blood tests, imaging reports, culture results, and antibiotic prescriptions are invaluable — they tell Dr. Savaj what has already been excluded and prevent repetition. Do not take new antibiotics before your appointment if at all possible — this reduces blood culture yield.

FUO investigation laboratory SCID-AI

 What Raises Immediate Red Flags

Splenomegaly — enlarged spleen: lymphoma, malaria, endocarditis, kala-azar
Lymphadenopathy — firm, non-tender nodes: TB, lymphoma
Hepatomegaly — enlarged liver: hepatitis, liver abscess, lymphoma
Heart murmur + fever: infective endocarditis until proven otherwise
Pancytopenia — all cell lines low: bone marrow infiltration (malignancy, kala-azar)
Very high ferritin (>1000 ng/mL): AOSD, haemophagocytic syndrome
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Emergency Red Flags

When Persistent Fever Becomes a Medical Emergency

Persistent fever is usually not an emergency — but certain accompanying signs transform it into one. These red flags require emergency assessment immediately, not a scheduled clinic appointment.

 WhatsApp Dr. Savaj Urgently

Confusion or altered consciousness

Meningitis, cerebral malaria, encephalitis, or typhoid encephalopathy — all require emergency assessment.

Neck stiffness + severe headache

Meningitis until proven otherwise. Do not delay for scheduled investigation.

Sudden severe abdominal pain

Typhoid perforation or intra-abdominal abscess rupture. Surgical emergency.

Breathlessness at rest

Pericardial effusion (TB pericarditis), pleural effusion, pneumonia — cardiac tamponade risk.

Bleeding from any site with fever

Possible endocarditis with embolic phenomena, or haematological malignancy with thrombocytopenia.

Rapidly worsening jaundice

Severe leptospirosis (Weil’s disease), liver abscess rupture, or fulminant hepatitis — potential liver failure.

Cold extremities + rapid pulse

Septic shock — requires emergency antibiotics and ICU. Do not wait.

Fever in severely immunocompromised patient

HIV with CD4 <50, chemotherapy-induced neutropenia, post-transplant: any fever is an emergency.

Why See Dr. Savaj

Why Persistent Fever Needs an Infectious Disease Specialist

Most patients with persistent fever have already seen one or more general physicians before reaching SCID-AI. They have been given antibiotics — sometimes multiple courses — without a diagnosis. The fever persists. The reason this happens is not a failure of the general physician — it is that persistent unexplained fever is specifically what infectious disease specialists are trained for.

Systematic Protocol, Not Random Testing

Dr. Savaj applies a structured, sequential FUO investigation protocol built on clinical probability — not ordering everything at once. Each phase of investigation is guided by the results of the previous phase. This finds the diagnosis faster and avoids wasting resources on low-probability tests before high-probability ones are excluded.

Extrapulmonary TB Recognition

TB with a normal chest X-ray is the most commonly missed diagnosis in Indian persistent fever. Dr. Savaj has specific training from P.D. Hinduja Hospital — one of India’s principal TB centres — in diagnosing extrapulmonary TB. He knows exactly which specimens to send, in what order, and how to interpret the results.

No Empirical Antibiotics Without a Plan

Every antibiotic course given without a diagnosis reduces the chance of finding the diagnosis. At SCID-AI, antibiotics are used when there is clinical urgency requiring treatment before culture results are available — not as a default response to persistent fever. Blood culture is always sent first.

Cross-Speciality Awareness

Persistent fever can be infectious, malignant, or autoimmune. An infectious disease specialist trained in all three categories — and who knows when to refer to haematology, rheumatology, or oncology — is uniquely positioned to navigate the full differential diagnosis systematically rather than managing only one category.

Persistent fever specialist consultation SCID-AI Surat
Patient Reviews

Patients Who Came With Unexplained Fever

My mother had fever for 5 weeks. Her regular doctor kept changing antibiotics. Dr. Savaj stopped all antibiotics, sent blood cultures and an echocardiogram on day 1. Infective endocarditis — a heart valve infection. She needed 6 weeks of IV antibiotics. The previous antibiotics had been partially masking it. Dr. Savaj’s systematic approach found what had been missed for weeks.

NP
Neha P.Infective Endocarditis — 5 weeks fever · Surat

Fever for 4 weeks, weight loss, night sweats. I was convinced it was TB. Dr. Savaj did a comprehensive workup — GeneXpert, IGRA, CT scan. No TB. He found lymphoma on the CT and immediately referred to haematology. Early diagnosis meant I started chemotherapy at a treatable stage. His ability to investigate across categories saved my life.

AK
Arun K.Lymphoma — 4 weeks fever + weight loss · Surat
Frequently Asked Questions

Questions About Persistent Fever

Answered by Dr. Pratik Savaj, FNB Infectious Diseases, SCID-AI, Surat.

How long does a fever need to last before it is considered persistent?
In clinical practice at SCID-AI, any fever lasting more than 7–10 days without a clear diagnosis warrants specialist assessment. The classical FUO definition — fever above 38.3°C on at least three occasions over more than 3 weeks with no diagnosis — is a research standard. In practice, Dr. Savaj investigates earlier, because the most common causes of persistent fever in Surat (extrapulmonary TB, typhoid, occult infection) are identifiable and treatable, and delay in diagnosis leads to complications.
Can persistent fever be caused by something other than infection?
Yes — and this is why a systematic approach rather than repeated antibiotic courses is essential. Persistent fever has three broad categories: Infectious (40–50% of cases — TB most common in India); Malignant (20–30% — lymphoma, leukaemia, solid organ cancers); and Inflammatory/Autoimmune (15–25% — SLE, adult-onset Still’s disease, vasculitis). In 5–15% of cases, no cause is found despite comprehensive investigation — and many of these resolve spontaneously.
I have been on antibiotics for 2 weeks with no improvement. What should I do?
Stop taking antibiotics and see Dr. Savaj immediately. There are three possibilities: the fever is not caused by a bacterial infection (antibiotics will never work); the fever is caused by a drug-resistant organism that the antibiotic does not cover; or the diagnosis is wrong entirely. Sending a blood culture before starting any antibiotic is the most important step — antibiotics taken before culture can sterilise the blood and prevent identification of the causative organism. Bring all previous test reports and a list of all antibiotics taken.
Why is TB the most common cause of persistent fever in India?
Because India has the world’s highest TB burden (2.8 million new cases per year) and because TB can affect virtually any organ with minimal or no respiratory symptoms. Extrapulmonary TB — affecting lymph nodes, spine, abdomen, meninges, kidneys — presents with persistent fever and a normal chest X-ray. This is why it is missed by doctors who look only at the lungs. In any Indian patient with unexplained fever lasting more than 2 weeks, TB must be systematically excluded before other causes are pursued — regardless of whether the patient has a cough.
What tests are done for persistent fever?
The investigation follows a structured protocol at SCID-AI: First-line: CBC, LFT, RFT, ESR, CRP, blood culture × 2 (before antibiotics), urine culture, CXR, ANA, blood smear (malaria), HIV test. Second-line: GeneXpert sputum + IGRA (TB), echocardiogram (endocarditis), CT chest/abdomen/pelvis (lymphoma, abscess, occult malignancy), LDH + uric acid + ferritin (malignancy/Still’s). Third-line: Bone marrow biopsy (haematological malignancy, visceral leishmaniasis), PET-CT (occult malignancy or inflammatory), targeted biopsy of abnormal lymph nodes or masses. Tests are ordered sequentially by probability — not all at once.
Is it safe to take paracetamol every day for persistent fever?
Paracetamol is safe at the correct dose (maximum 4g/day for adults, or 1g every 6–8 hours as needed) for short-term use while investigation is underway. However, taking paracetamol daily for weeks without a diagnosis is managing the symptom without treating the cause. Importantly, paracetamol can mask fever and potentially delay recognition of a worsening clinical picture. The correct approach is to investigate the cause while using paracetamol for comfort — not to continue indefinitely without diagnosis.
Can persistent fever be caused by a drug I am taking?
Yes — drug fever is an underrecognised cause of persistent fever. It occurs 1–3 weeks after starting a new medication and resolves within 48–72 hours of stopping the drug. Common culprits: antibiotics (especially penicillins, cephalosporins, sulfonamides), anti-tuberculosis drugs, antiepileptics (phenytoin, carbamazepine), allopurinol, and hydralazine. Drug fever classically occurs with a relatively normal or even slowed pulse for the degree of fever (Faget’s sign — also seen in typhoid). If you started a new medication around the time the fever began, bring this to Dr. Savaj’s attention.
When does persistent fever become a medical emergency?
Seek emergency care immediately if persistent fever is accompanied by: confusion or altered consciousness (meningitis, cerebral malaria, encephalitis); neck stiffness with severe headache (meningitis); sudden severe abdominal pain (typhoid perforation, intra-abdominal abscess rupture); breathlessness at rest (pneumonia, pericardial effusion, pleural effusion); bleeding from any site with fever; rapidly worsening jaundice with fever; or shock (cold extremities, low blood pressure, rapid pulse). These are red flags that require emergency assessment regardless of how long the fever has been present.
Consult Dr. Pratik Savaj

Fever for More Than 2 Weeks? Get a Systematic Workup.

No referral needed. Bring all previous reports. Persistent fever with no diagnosis is exactly the clinical situation that Dr. Pratik Savaj, FNB Infectious Diseases, is trained for. SCID-AI, Nanpura, Surat — with a structured FUO investigation protocol that finds what others have missed.

SCID-AI, Nanpura, Surat — 405 SNS Axis Business Space, Besides Mahavir Hospital, Surat 395001
Mon–Sat: 11 AM–1 PM & 4–6 PM · Sunday: Closed
+91 72839 34807 — Call or WhatsApp
Dr. Pratik Savaj
Dr. Pratik Savaj FNB Infectious Diseases
MBBS · DNB Medicine · Fellowship ID
P.D. Hinduja Hospital, Mumbai
Morning11:00 AM – 1:00 PM, Mon–Sat
Evening4:00 PM – 6:00 PM, Mon–Sat
Phone+91 72839 34807
 WhatsApp to Book