The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention today released updated  to help health care providers diagnose and treat patients with vaping-associated lung injury. Patients with e-cigarette, or vaping, lung injury (EVALI) may have symptoms similar to flu and other respiratory infections, which can make the condition hard to differentiate during flu season, the guidance notes.
 
鈥淎s rates of influenza increase, providers evaluating patients with respiratory illnesses should ask them about e-cigarette, or vaping, product use; evaluate whether patients require hospital admission; and consider empiric use of antimicrobials, including antivirals, as well as possible corticosteroids,鈥 the guidance states.
 
CDC will host a for clinicians Thursday to review the recommendations.
 
About 94% of EVALI patients have been hospitalized, based on new from 1,977 patients, the agency said. CDC has identified 2,172 people with confirmed or probable lung injuries associated with vaping in 49 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, including 42 deaths. The agency recently identified vitamin E acetate as a 鈥減otential chemical of concern鈥 in biologic samples from these patients. CDC and the Food and Drug Administration continue to investigate the cause of the illness, and encourage health care providers to possible cases to their state or local health department.

Related News Articles

Headline
The White House May 22 released its Make America Healthy Again report that focuses on childhood chronic disease. The report highlights findings from the MAHA鈥
Headline
The Food and Drug Administration May 16 announced it cleared the first blood test to diagnose Alzheimer鈥檚 disease. The test, created by Fujirebio Diagnostics,鈥
Headline
The National Institutes of Health May 8 released an analysis that found incidences of 14 types of cancer increased among people under age 50 from 2010-2019.鈥
Headline
A New England Journal of Medicine study published yesterday found success in administering dostarlimab, an immunotherapy drug, to a group of 103 cancer鈥
Headline
Overall cancer death rates declined steadily among both men and women from 2018 through 2022, according to the National Institutes of Health's latest annual鈥
Headline
A study published April 14 by JAMA Network Open found that rates of pancreatic and colon cancer rose among young adults from 2000-2021. Researchers examined鈥