She had no pain or numbness in her arms; she had no hectic fever, nor any cold shiverings, and the urine was in due quantity, and of the natural colour.
The incessant and long-continued addition of pus to the blood may be the cause of hectic fever.
If the patient survive, and the matter be evacuated from the joints by openings into its cavity, hectic fever is almost certain to supervene.
When the disease is extensive, and has endured for a considerable period, hectic fever supervenes, and is aggravated after the abscesses give way.
The long-continued process of suppuration in paratyphlitis leads also at times to hectic fever or pyaemia, with slow marasmus.
These contagious matters form ulcers, which either heal spontaneously, or by art; or continue to spread, and destroy the patient, by other kinds of hectic fever.
But, if air be admitted to these internal abscesses, this kind of fever is changed into a hectic fever in a single day.
Hectic fever is now fully established; the eye is unusually bright and pearly, with dilated pupils, which gives a peculiar expression; the paroxysms of coughing exhaust the patient, and he gasps and pants for breath.
Constitutional; as hectic fever, in which all parts of the body become emaciated.
Hectic Fever generally occurs soon after the pulmonary symptoms are developed, and increases in intensity with the progress of the disease.
When sinuses have formed and become infected with pyogenic bacteria, there may be a diurnal variation in the temperature of the type known as hectic fever (Fig.
The prognosis in hectic fever depends on the completeness with which the further absorption of toxins can be prevented.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "hectic fever" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.