complications
Last edited 02/2022
Influenza causes up to 4000 deaths per year in the UK. The risk of complications of influenza is high in the following groups of patients:
- people of all ages with chronic respiratory disease including asthma, chronic heart disease, chronic renal disease, chronic liver disease
- with conditions and treatments that suppress the immune function
- diabetes mellitus
- all those aged 65 years or older
- those in long stay residential care (1).
Complications include:
- respiratory
- acute bronchitis
- most common lower respiratory tract complication and is seen in around 20% of influenza cases (2)
- more common in elderly and those with medical conditions
- influenza related pneumonia – the incidence varies widely (from 2% to 38%), generally seen frequently and with greater severity in patients with pre existing chronic cardiac and respiratory conditions
- secondary bacterial pneumonia
- more common
- typically occurs four to five days after onset of illness
- implicated pathogens include – Streptococcus pneumoniae, Staphylococcus aureus, Haemophilus influenza Groups A, C and G beta-haemolytic streptococci
- primary viral pneumonia
- uncommon
- typically become breathless within the first 48 hours of onset of fever
- mortality in hospitalised patients is high (>40%) despite maximum supportive treatment on intensive care
- exacerbations of chronic lung diseases such as asthma and COPD
- up to 28% of exacerbations of COPD are associated with influenza A or B (2)
- lung abscess, emphysema and invasive pulmonary aspergillosis (2)
- cardiovascular
- exacerbation of heart failure
- ECG abnormalities – common, but most are not associated with cardiac symptoms
- myocarditis – rare (1)
- CNS
- encephalitis/encephalopathy – rare, occurs within first week of illness, more common in children and Japan
- Guillain-Barre syndrome
- other complications
- toxic shock syndrome
- otitis media (in children) (3)
- diabetic complications
- myositis – occurs mostly in children infected with influenza B
Reference:
- British Infection Society; British Thoracic Society; Health Protection Agency. Pandemic flu: clinical management of patients with an influenza-like illness during an influenza pandemic. Provisional guidelines from the British Infection Society, British Thoracic Society, and Health Protection Agency in collaboration with the Department of Health. Thorax. 2007;62 Suppl 1:1-46.
- Turner D et al. Systematic review and economic decision modelling for the prevention and treatment of influenza A and B. Health Technol Assess. 2003;7(35):1-170
- Immunisation Against Infectious Disease - "The Green Book". Chapter 19. Influenza (October 2020)