B symptoms
Classification according to ICD-10 | |
---|---|
R50.9 | Fever, unspecified |
R61.9 | Hyperhidrosis, unspecified |
R63.4 | Abnormal weight loss |
ICD-10 online (WHO version 2019) |
The term B symptoms denotes a triad of the following symptoms
- Unexplained fever (> 38 ° C)
- massive night sweats (wet hair, soaked sleeping clothes)
- Unintentional weight loss of more than ten percent of body weight within six months
The B symptoms can occur in inflammatory diseases such as tuberculosis , actinomycosis , HIV infection, or invasive intestinal diseases caused by amoebas, but also in malignant processes (e.g. Hodgkin lymphoma ) and are considered to be an unfavorable prognostic sign. The most important means of recording B symptoms is a precise history of the patient.
For concept formation
The letter “B” in the term “B symptoms” is explained by the two additions “A” and (as here) “B” of the Ann Arbor classification for malignant lymphomas . If the above-mentioned symptoms are present, one speaks of a "B-symptomatology", if they are missing, of an "A-symptomatology". In German, the term "B-Symptomatik" can also stand for "accompanying symptoms".
Web links
- Glossary of the Leukemia-Lymphom-Hilfe SELP eV
- Entry on B symptoms in Flexikon , a wiki from DocCheck
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Walter Siegenthaler: Siegenthaler's differential diagnosis: Internal diseases - from symptom to diagnosis. 19th edition Thieme, Stuttgart 2005, p. 198.
- ↑ Dold, Stephan: The abdominal actinomycosis: diagnosis and therapy; Case study and literature review , 2004, dissertation, University of Freiburg
- ↑ Hanns-Wolf Baenkler, Hartmut Goldschmidt , Johannes-Martin Hahn: Kurzlehrbuch Internal Medicine. Thieme, Stuttgart 2011.
- ↑ Jürgen Schölmerich: Medical Therapy 2005/2006 . Springer, 2005.