The causes of influenza-like illness range from benign self-limited illnesses such as
gastroenteritis,
rhinoviral disease, and
influenza, to severe, sometimes life-threatening, diseases such as
meningitis,
sepsis, and
leukemia.
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. 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 above). In the United States during the 2008–9
influenza season through 18 April, 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%. 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. 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.
Other causes Infectious diseases causing ILI include
respiratory syncytial virus,
human metapneumovirus infection,
malaria, acute
HIV/AIDS infection,
herpes,
hepatitis C,
Lyme disease,
rabies,
myocarditis,
Q fever,
dengue fever,
poliomyelitis,
pneumonia,
measles,
SARS,
COVID-19, and many others.
Pharmaceutical drugs that may cause ILI include many
biologics such as
interferons and
monoclonal antibodies.
Chemotherapeutic agents also commonly cause flu-like symptoms. Other drugs associated with a flu-like syndrome include
bisphosphonates,
caspofungin, and
levamisole. A flu-like syndrome can also be caused by an
influenza vaccine or other vaccines, and by
opioid withdrawal in physically dependent individuals. ==Diagnosis==