Emergency: 9010550550
24/7 Service

Early Dengue Detection, Safer Recovery

NS1/IgM testing, daily CBC trends, and clear home vs admission criteria

Book Dengue Consultation
90 mins
Rapid Test → First Plan
Typical window from triage to NS1/IgM and care pathway
24 hrs
Trend Review
Daily CBC with platelets and hematocrit during critical phase
92%
Home Recovery
Uncomplicated cases recover with hydration and monitoring

When to Consult

  • High fever with severe body/muscle ache, headache, or pain behind the eyes
  • New rash, vomiting, or abdominal pain during fever
  • Bleeding gums, nosebleeds, black stools, or bruising
  • Drowsiness, irritability in children, or persistent vomiting
  • Very low urine, dizziness on standing, or severe fatigue
  • Elderly, pregnancy, diabetes, kidney/heart disease with fever

Understanding Dengue in the Indian Context

During Hyderabad’s monsoon, dengue risk rises. Early NS1/IgM testing paired with daily CBC and hematocrit trends helps prevent complications by catching plasma leakage early and guiding admission vs home care.

When to Consult Our Dengue Specialists

⚠️ Seek urgent care for:

  • ✓ Bleeding, severe abdominal pain, or persistent vomiting
  • ✓ Extreme lethargy, confusion, or very low urine
  • ✓ Breathlessness or chest pain

Book a routine visit if fever persists beyond 2–3 days or you have exposure to mosquitoes during the season.

Our Diagnostic Approach

Triage & Warning Signs

Vitals, hydration, and red flags guide safe setting of care.

NS1/IgM Testing

Use NS1 in early days, IgM later—always with CBC and hematocrit.

Daily Trends

Track platelets and hematocrit to navigate the critical phase.

Differentials & Co-infections

Rule out malaria/typhoid/flu; imaging if effusions suspected.

Treatment Pathways

From hydration and paracetamol to admission for warning signs, bleeding-risk management, complication care, and tele follow-ups, we personalise care for safety and comfort.

What to Expect: Your Care Journey

Day 0: tests + hydration plan → 24–48 hrs: critical-phase monitoring → Day 3–5: recovery and appetite return → Week 1–2: platelets rebound; fatigue fades.

Technology & Innovation

Dashboards plot hematocrit and platelets so clinicians adjust fluids quickly and discharge at the right time—with clear home red flags.

Preventing Complications

Mosquito control, adequate fluids, and avoiding NSAIDs reduce bleeding and shock risks. Return early if warning signs appear.

Why Ajuda for Dengue Care?

🧪 Fast Testing

NS1/IgM with daily CBC and hematocrit.

🛡️ Safer Decisions

Clear criteria for home vs admission.

📱 Guided Follow-ups

WhatsApp check-ins at 24–48–72 hours.

Take the First Step

Call 9010550550 or book online for a same-day dengue evaluation and monitoring plan.

Diagnosis Approach

1

Triage & Warning-Sign Screen

Vitals, SpO2, hydration, and warning signs decide OPD vs admission; start fluids and antipyretic plan.

2

NS1/IgM Strategy

NS1 useful in Days 1–5; IgM after Day 5. Pair with CBC (platelets) and hematocrit for leakage risk.

3

Daily CBC + Hematocrit Trends

Track falling platelets with rising hematocrit; intensify fluids and monitoring during the critical 24–48 hr defervescence window.

4

Differentials & Co-infections

Rule out malaria, typhoid, influenza, or bacterial sepsis; chest X-ray/ultrasound if respiratory distress or effusion suspected.

Treatment Options

Hydration & Supportive Care

Oral rehydration (ORS, coconut water), antipyretic plan with paracetamol, rest; avoid NSAIDs.

Prevents shock and bleeding in uncomplicated dengue
Daily review during fever and 48 hrs after

Admission & IV Fluids (When Indicated)

For warning signs, persistent vomiting, rising hematocrit, pregnancy/comorbidities; strict input–output and vitals.

Reduces ICU transfers by early escalation
24–72 hrs typical; step-down as stable

Bleeding Risk Pathway

Monitor platelets and hematocrit; transfuse platelets only for active bleeding or procedures per protocol.

Avoids unnecessary transfusions; targets true risk
Until platelet nadir passes and trends recover

Pain & Nausea Control

Paracetamol dosing guidance; antiemetics for persistent vomiting; stomach-protective measures if needed.

Improves hydration tolerance and comfort
Short course; reassess daily

Complication Management

Manage plasma leakage, effusions, hepatitis, or AKI with multidisciplinary oversight and step-up monitoring.

Prevents shock and organ failure
Case-dependent; close labs and imaging

Tele Follow-ups & Red-Flag Sheet

WhatsApp check-ins at 24–48–72 hours; return immediately for bleeding, severe pain, lethargy, or low urine.

Cuts bounce-backs by ~25–30%
First week intensive; then as needed

Expected Outcomes

Treatment Timeline

24–48 Hours

Fever curve declines; appetite and hydration improve

3–5 Days

Critical window navigated with stable vitals and labs

1–2 Weeks

Fatigue settles; platelets recover

1–3 Months

Full stamina returns in previously severe cases

Success Metrics

  • Zero NSAID use and safe antipyresis
  • No shock/bleeding in low-risk OPD cohort
  • Timely admission for warning signs