Influenza-like illness

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Proportion of positive influenza tests during a recent flu season.

Influenza-like illness (ILI), also known as acute respiratory infection (ARI) and flu-like syndrome, is a medical diagnosis of possible influenza or other illness causing a set of common symptoms, with SARI referring to Severe Acute Respiratory Infection.

Symptoms commonly include fever, shivering, chills, malaise, dry cough, loss of appetite, body aches and nausea, typically in connection with a sudden onset of illness[1]. In most cases, the symptoms are caused by cytokines released by immune system activation.[citation needed]

Common causes of ILI include the common cold and influenza, which tends to be more severe than the common cold. Less common causes include side effects of many drugs and manifestations of many other diseases.

Causes

The causes of influenza like illness range from benign self limited illnesses such as gastroenteritis, influenza, and rhinoviral disease to severe, life threatening diseases such as meningitis, sepsis, and leukemia.

Mild causes

Life threatening causes

Influenza

Technically, any clinical diagnosis of influenza is a diagnosis of ILI, not of influenza. This distinction usually is of no great concern because, regardless of cause, most cases of ILI are mild and self-limiting. Furthermore, except perhaps during the peak of a major outbreak of influenza, most cases of ILI are not due to influenza.[2][3] ILI is very common: in the United States each adult and child can average 1–3 and 3–6 episodes per year of ILI.[2]

Influenza in humans is subject to clinical surveillance by a global network of more than 110 National Influenza Centers. These centers receive samples obtained from patients diagnosed with ILI, and test the samples for the presence of an influenza virus. Not all patients diagnosed with ILI are tested, and not all test results are reported. Samples are selected for testing based on severity of ILI, and as part of routine sampling, and at participating surveillance clinics and laboratories.[4] The United States has a general surveillance program, a border surveillance program, and a hospital surveillance program, all devoted to finding new outbreaks of influenza.

In most years, in the majority of samples tested, the influenza virus is not present (see figure). In the United States during the 2008–9 influenza season through April 18, out of 183,839 samples tested and reported to the CDC, only 25,925 (14.1%) were positive for influenza. The percent positive reached a maximum of about 25%.[3] The percent positive increases with the incidence of infection, peaking with the peak incidence of influenza (see figure). During an epidemic, 60-70% of patients with a clear influenza-like illness actually have influenza.[5]

Samples are respiratory samples, usually collected by a physician, nurse, or assistant, and sent to a hospital laboratory for preliminary testing. There are several methods of collecting a respiratory sample, depending on requirements of the laboratory that will test the sample. A sample may be obtained from around the nose simply by wiping with a dry cotton swab.[6]

Other causes

Infectious diseases causing ILI include malaria, acute HIV infection, hepatitis C, Lyme disease, myocarditis,[7] Q fever, dengue fever[8] poliomyelitis, and many others.

Pharmaceutical drugs that may cause ILI include many biologics such as interferons or monoclonal antibodies.[9][10][11] Chemotherapeutic agents also commonly cause flu-like symptoms. Other drugs associated with a flu-like syndrome include bisphosphonates, caspofungin or levamisole.[12][13] A flu-like syndrome can also be caused by an influenza vaccine or other vaccines, and by opioid withdrawal in addicts.

Diagnosis

Influenza-like illness is a nonspecific respiratory illness characterized by fever, fatigue, cough, and other symptoms that stop within a few days. Most cases of ILI are caused not by influenza but by other viruses (e.g., rhinoviruses and respiratory syncytial virus, adenoviruses, and parainfluenza viruses). Less common causes of ILI include bacteria such as Legionella, Chlamydia pneumoniae, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, and Streptococcus pneumoniae. Influenza, RSV, and certain bacterial infections are particularly important causes of ILI because these infections can lead to serious complications requiring hospitalization. Physicians who examine persons with ILI can use a combination of epidemiologic and clinical data (information about recent other patients and the individual patient) and, if necessary, laboratory and radiographic tests to determine the cause of the ILI.[2]

During the 2009 swine flu outbreak many thousands of cases of ILI were reported in the media as suspected swine flu. Most were false alarms. A differential diagnosis of probable swine flu requires not only symptoms but also a high likelihood of swine flu due to the person's recent history. During the 2009 swine flu outbreak in the United States, the CDC advised physicians to "consider swine influenza infection in the differential diagnosis of patients with acute febrile respiratory illness who have either been in contact with persons with confirmed swine flu, or who were in one of the five U.S. states that have reported swine flu cases or in Mexico during the 7 days preceding their illness onset."[14] A diagnosis of confirmed swine flu required laboratory testing of a respiratory sample (a simple nose and throat swab).[14]

In rare cases

If a person with ILI also has either a history of exposure or an occupational or environmental risk of exposure to Bacillus anthracis (anthrax), then a differential diagnosis requires distinguishing between ILI and anthrax. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has published guidance on how to do this.[15] Other rare causes of ILI include leukemia and metal fume fever.

In horses

ILI occurs in some horses after intramuscular injection of vaccines. For these horses, light exercise speeds resolution of the ILI. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) may be given with the vaccine.[16]

See also

References

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  1. "Case definitions". European Influenza Surveillance Scheme. 2005-12-12. Retrieved 2009-07-15. 
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  3. 3.0 3.1 "2008-2009 Influenza Season Week 15 ending April 18, 2009". FluView: A Weekly Influenza Surveillance Report Prepared by the Influenza Division. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. April 24, 2009. Retrieved April 26, 2009. 
  4. "Flu Activity & Surveillance". Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 17 April 2009. Retrieved 26 April 2009. 
  5. "Influenza - Frequently asked questions". European Influenza Surveillance Scheme. November 21, 2005. Retrieved April 28, 2009. 
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  13. Scheinfeld N, Rosenberg JD, Weinberg JM (2004). "Levamisole in dermatology : a review". Am J Clin Dermatol. 5 (2): 97–104. doi:10.2165/00128071-200405020-00004. PMID 15109274. 
  14. 14.0 14.1 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (April 26, 2009). "CDC Health Update: Swine Influenza A (H1N1) Update: New Interim Recommendations and Guidance for Health Directors about Strategic National Stockpile Materiel". Health Alert Network. Retrieved April 27, 2009. 
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  16. Nancy S. Loving, DVM (2006). All horse systems go. Trafalger Square Publishing.  page 439