Why flu season could make it harder for doctors to diagnose vaping-related illness
The U.S. has seen 2,668 cases of vaping-related illness, while Canada has had just 16
A 20-year-old man shows up in a U.S. emergency room with flu-like symptoms.
He's hospitalized for four days before leaving, against medical advice, only to return to the ER with chest pain, fever and shortness of breath.
By this point he's lost almost 20 pounds.
Doctors are stumped.
They test him for strep throat, hepatitis, HIV, and other diseases, all of which turn up negative.
It's only when a camera is inserted into his airway and a CT scan is done to examine his lungs that it's confirmed he has vaping-related illness.
The case, published in the Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians this week, highlights the challenges in diagnosing vaping-related illness — especially during flu season.
How flu season can complicate things
Canada is currently facing an early start to flu season, with both influenza A and B strains circulating at the same time.
So far, there have been nearly 12,500 confirmed cases of flu across the country and 10 deaths.
Dr. Tereza Martinu, a lung transplant respirologist with Toronto General Hospital who treated an Ontario teen with vaping-related illness last year, said diagnosing it can be difficult for doctors at this time of year.
"It always looks like something else," she said, adding that pneumonia, bronchitis, asthma and the flu have similar symptoms.
"I think doctors don't think about it, and therefore often don't diagnose it."
Martinu said it's important for doctors to be aware of vaping-related illness, particularly during flu season, and to ask patients about their exposure to vaping in order to rule it out.
"I think it's important to increase our awareness of it," she said. "You need to then at least think about it and ask the right questions such as: Does the patient have exposure to vaping?"
Dr. Atul Kapur, an Ottawa-based emergency room doctor and co-chair of the Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians'