Conversation: The conversation between human and AI assistant.
[|Human|] Hi. My daughter, 18, began not feeling well on Tuesday. She was achy & tired. On Wednesday morning she woke up with puffy eyelids & still not did not feel well. On Thursday, eyes still puffy, body aches, and she had a mild fever of 99-100, & then it went up to 102 in the evening. Same symptoms remained on Friday with fever remaining between 99-100 when using tylenol. I took her to the Dr. on Friday. Dr. wasn t sure what she had - something viral? Flu? NO blood work was taken. Although we are not aware of any tick bite (we are in a high tick area), we discussed the possibility of the tick disease, anaplasmosis because 2 of our close neighbors were recently diagnosed. Dr. suggested waiting things out through the weekend to see how she did and wrote us a script for Doxycycline and left if up to us on whether we wanted to start it. Fever went up to 102 again on Fri. night. Saturday morning we gave her 1 doxycycline & tylenol. Thoughout the day, fever averaged about 100.6 then went to 101+ during the night. Before bed we gave her a 2nd dose of the Doxyclycline which she threw up within just a few minutes of taking. Eyes seem to get more puffy the higher the fever. After throwing up the Doxyclycline, we did not give it to her again and have continued with tylenol or ibuprofen to try to keep the fever down. Tonight follows the same pattern, fever up, body aches worse (legs feel crawly to her at times), & eyes more puffy again. Cool compresses do not bring down the puffiness of eyes. We re not sure what to do next. Start her back on Doxy, take her in tomorrow for blood work? She is visibly uncomfortable. She has also had a decreased appetite. At times, in addition to the puffy eyes, her face looks somewhat swollen. No sore throat but some swollen glands in neck. Please help. Thank you
[|AI|]  Hello, her symptoms seem a lot like influenza although other illnesses (viral or bacterial) could have caused the same symptoms. Since there are not many symptoms to guide the diagnostic procedure, you've got the choice to wait and see or to do some tests. Some useful tests include the complete blood count and the c-reactive protein (CRP). Increased white blood cells (with polymorphonuclear renomination) and high values of CRP likely indicate bacterial disease which needs antibiotic treatment. Low CRP values usually accompany viral illnesses, although none of the above is 100% error-free. Worrisome symptoms and signs include faintness or orthostatic hypotension, very high pulse rate, decreased urine output, shortness of breath, too many breaths/minute and decreased cognitive functions. I hope I've been clear enough, without too much medical jargon.I'll be glad to provide further clarifications though, if you're still left with questions. Kind Regards!