Literature DB >> 15057573

Unmasking influenza virus infection in patients attended to in the emergency department.

J Monmany1, N Rabella, N Margall, P Domingo, I Gich, G Vázquez.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Infection by the influenza virus may pass undetected in many adult patients attended to in the emergency department because its diagnosis usually relies on clinical manifestations, which can be distorted by symptoms of a preexisting disease, superposed complications or nontypical manifestations of influenza virus infection (confusing symptoms). PATIENTS AND METHODS: We performed this observational, prospective study with an antigen detection test by indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFA) to estimate the presence of influenza virus infection in such patients. No confirmatory test was performed to validate a positive or negative IFA result. Then we compared those who were antigen positive to those who were negative and also analyzed those who were positive classified by age, comorbidity and clinical presentation. We also evaluated the use of medical and hospital resources and vaccination status. Posterior pharynx swab specimens from 136 consecutive adult patients, 74 women and 62 men with a mean age of 68.7 +/- 17.9 (range: 18-97) years attended to in the emergency department of a university hospital in Barcelona during the 1999-2000 influenza epidemic were examined. Tested patients presented either a classical influenza syndrome, a deterioration of a previous condition or any abrupt onset of symptoms without an obvious cause.
RESULTS: Influenza A virus antigen was detected in 99 (72.8%) of the 136 patients included in the study. Confusing symptoms were present in 86 patients with laboratory-confirmed influenza and 40 of them lacked influenza syndrome. Prostration, aching and fever out of proportion to catarrhal symptoms (disproportionate prostration) and cough were independent predictors for this diagnosis (OR = 5.14; 95% CI: 1.98-13.35, p = 0.001 and OR = 4.40, 95% CI, 1.65-11.75, p = 0.03, respectively). Among the 99 patients who tested positive, 72 were >or= 65 years of age. This older positive group compared to the 27 also positive < 65 (non-old) had a tendency to show symptoms mediated by cytokines less frequently: malaise was present in 76.4% of the older positive patients vs 92.6% in the non-old positive ones, p = 0.07. The equivalent percentages for muscle ache were: 56.9% vs 77.8%, p = 0.06; for dysthermia: 54.2% vs 70.4%, p = 0.08; for headache: 35.2% vs 66.7%, p = 0.005, and for disproportionate prostration: 47.2% vs 66.7%, p = 0.08. Cough was more frequent in the older positive group: 94.4% vs 77.8%, p = 0.02. Older positive patients were also hospitalized and received antibiotics more frequently than the non-old positive ones: 65.3% vs 40.7%, p = 0.03 and 81.9% vs 63.0%, p = 0.046, respectively. Hospitalization was independently correlated with the presence of complications (OR = 4.5, 95% IC 1.27-15.95, p = 0.02). Patients with the highest comorbidity, evaluated with the Charlson scale, were more inadequately vaccinated than those with moderate or low comorbidity.
CONCLUSION: Influenza virus infection has a great and underestimated impact in the emergency department during influenza epidemics. High frequency of confusing symptoms, which overcome classical influenza syndrome in adult people with comorbidity, may explain this effect. Disproportionate prostration and cough are symptoms that independently predict its diagnosis in the global adult population, whereas in the elderly, fever and cough should arouse this suspicion whether or not they present classic symptoms. In our setting, individuals with high comorbidity are inadequately vaccinated.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15057573      PMCID: PMC7099985          DOI: 10.1007/s15010-004-3088-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Infection        ISSN: 0300-8126            Impact factor:   3.553


  13 in total

1.  Clinical Practice Guidelines by the Infectious Diseases Society of America: 2018 Update on Diagnosis, Treatment, Chemoprophylaxis, and Institutional Outbreak Management of Seasonal Influenzaa.

Authors:  Timothy M Uyeki; Henry H Bernstein; John S Bradley; Janet A Englund; Thomas M File; Alicia M Fry; Stefan Gravenstein; Frederick G Hayden; Scott A Harper; Jon Mark Hirshon; Michael G Ison; B Lynn Johnston; Shandra L Knight; Allison McGeer; Laura E Riley; Cameron R Wolfe; Paul E Alexander; Andrew T Pavia
Journal:  Clin Infect Dis       Date:  2019-03-05       Impact factor: 9.079

2.  Influenza virus infection: an approach to identify predictors for in-hospital and 90-day mortality from patients in Vienna during the season 2017/18.

Authors:  E Pawelka; Mario Karolyi; S Daller; C Kaczmarek; H Laferl; I Niculescu; B Schrader; C Stütz; A Zoufaly; C Wenisch
Journal:  Infection       Date:  2019-06-15       Impact factor: 3.553

3.  Seasonal influenza in adults and children--diagnosis, treatment, chemoprophylaxis, and institutional outbreak management: clinical practice guidelines of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

Authors:  Scott A Harper; John S Bradley; Janet A Englund; Thomas M File; Stefan Gravenstein; Frederick G Hayden; Allison J McGeer; Kathleen M Neuzil; Andrew T Pavia; Michael L Tapper; Timothy M Uyeki; Richard K Zimmerman
Journal:  Clin Infect Dis       Date:  2009-04-15       Impact factor: 9.079

4.  Delay in diagnosis of influenza virus in an elderly hospitalized patient: a fatal outcome.

Authors:  Nicole Haber; Djamal Khelili; Delphine Martineau; Siham Dekimeche; Carol Szekely; Pierre Lebon
Journal:  Clin Med Insights Case Rep       Date:  2012-01-08

5.  Use of simple clinical and laboratory predictors to differentiate influenza from dengue and other febrile illnesses in the emergency room.

Authors:  Shi-Yu Huang; Ing-Kit Lee; Lin Wang; Jien-Wei Liu; Shih-Chiang Hung; Chien-Chih Chen; Tzu-Yao Chang; Wen-Chi Huang
Journal:  BMC Infect Dis       Date:  2014-11-25       Impact factor: 3.090

6.  Influenza virus infections among patients attending emergency department according to main reason to presenting to ED: A 3-year prospective observational study during seasonal epidemic periods.

Authors:  Enrique Casalino; Stephanie Antoniol; Nadhira Fidouh; Christophe Choquet; Jean-Christophe Lucet; Xavier Duval; Benoit Visseaux; Laurent Pereira
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-08-16       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Is there a clinical difference between influenza A and B virus infections in hospitalized patients? : Results after routine polymerase chain reaction point-of-care testing in the emergency room from 2017/2018.

Authors:  Mario Karolyi; Erich Pawelka; Simon Daller; Caroline Kaczmarek; Hermann Laferl; Iulia Niculescu; Birte Schrader; Christian Stütz; Alexander Zoufaly; Christoph Wenisch
Journal:  Wien Klin Wochenschr       Date:  2019-06-18       Impact factor: 1.704

Review 8.  Communicable respiratory threats in the ED: tuberculosis, influenza, SARS, and other aerosolized infections.

Authors:  Richard E Rothman; Yu-Hsiang Hsieh; Samuel Yang
Journal:  Emerg Med Clin North Am       Date:  2006-11       Impact factor: 2.264

9.  Five years of hospital based surveillance of influenza-like illness and influenza in a short-stay geriatric unit.

Authors:  Corinne Régis; Nicolas Voirin; Vanessa Escuret; Byeul-A Kim; Olivier Robert; Bruno Lina; Brigitte Comte; Philippe Vanhems
Journal:  BMC Res Notes       Date:  2014-02-21

10.  Sources of viral respiratory infections in Canadian acute care hospital healthcare personnel.

Authors:  S Buckrell; B L Coleman; S A McNeil; K Katz; M P Muller; A Simor; M Loeb; J Powis; S P Kuster; J M Di Bella; K K L Coleman; S J Drews; P Kohler; A McGeer
Journal:  J Hosp Infect       Date:  2020-01-16       Impact factor: 3.926

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