Respiratory symptoms more reliable indicator of H1N1, not fever alone
July 30th, 2010 - 1:08 pm ICT by ANIWashington, July 30 (ANI): A recent study has revealed that individuals with mild H1N1 infection may go undetected using standard diagnostic criteria.
The study has , therefore, concluded that coughing or other respiratory symptoms are more accurate in determining influenza infection than presence of a fever.
Currently, public health officials rely on body temperature (detecting fever) to screen individuals for potential infection with H1N1.
However, the study’s authors found that coughing, not fever is a more reliable indicator of infection because nearly half of the individuals with mild infection may not have fever.
A team led by Sang Won Park of Seoul National University investigated confirmed cases of H1N1 who were hospitalized and quarantined during the early stages of the pandemic in 2009.
The study’s results showed only 45.5 percent of the case subjects had fever. Individuals with mild infection and no fever have the potential to evade detection at airports or medical triage units, thus continuing the chain of infection.
“Our study found that fever is not reliable for case definition, even though it has been regarded as a key factor in determining influenza infection,” Park said.
“We are aware of other studies that show fever present in as few as 31 percent of confirmed cases of influenza. We found that the most sensitive indicator was cough.
Park added that that “screening should take any kind of respiratory manifestation into account.”
The findings were published in American Journal of Infection Control, the official publication of the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology, (APIC). (ANI)
- How H1N1 is different from other viruses as a respiratory illness - Oct 23, 2010
- The reason behind mildness of 2009 H1N1 pandemic - Jun 19, 2010
- Link between low birth weight and H1N1 flu revealed - May 03, 2011
- Exposure to seasonal flu made middle-aged prone to H1N1 - Dec 07, 2010
- Hand washing may limit pandemic flu transmission - Apr 30, 2010
- Aggressive infection control protects cancer patients from H1N1 - Dec 17, 2009
- 2 more people die in Kansas of Swine Flu - Sep 25, 2009
- People with severe asthma need higher dose of H1N1 vaccine: Study - Dec 14, 2010
- H1N1 pandemic flu strain 'key to universal vaccine' - Jan 11, 2011
- 54 more cases of swine flu in Delhi - Sep 01, 2010
- Key Facts about Swine Influenza (Swine Flu) - Apr 26, 2009
- Pandemic flu concerns have positive effect on personal hygiene behaviour - May 28, 2010
- H1N1 riskier than regular flu for asthmatic kids: Study - Nov 20, 2009
- Tamiflu may prevent pneumonia in swine flu patients - Sep 29, 2010
- H1N1 virus more easily spread during plane travel - Jan 08, 2010
Tags: airports, american journal of infection control, body temperature, case definition, case subjects, chain of infection, cough, diagnostic criteria, fever, h1n1, influenza, influenza infection, manifestation, medical triage, mild infection, pandemic, public health officials, respiratory symptoms, sensitive indicator, seoul national university