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Angad, JaL. (MEASLES)  Etiology  RNA virus of the genus Morbillivirus in the family Paramyxoviridae  Epidemiology  Prior to use of vaccine, peak.

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Presentation on theme: "Angad, JaL. (MEASLES)  Etiology  RNA virus of the genus Morbillivirus in the family Paramyxoviridae  Epidemiology  Prior to use of vaccine, peak."— Presentation transcript:

1 Angad, JaL

2 (MEASLES)

3  Etiology  RNA virus of the genus Morbillivirus in the family Paramyxoviridae  Epidemiology  Prior to use of vaccine, peak incidence was among 5-10 y/o  Transmission  90% of susceptible contacts acquire the disease  Maximal dissemination occurs by droplet spray during the prodromal period

4 Virus enters cells of respiratory tract and replicates locally Spreads to local lymph nodes Disseminates hematogenously to skin and mucous membrane

5  Incubation Period: Last 10-12 days  Prodromal stage: Last 3-5 days characterized by low-mod grade fever, dry cough, coryza, photophobia & conjunctivitis. Kopliks spots appear by 2 nd -3 rd day  Rash - as exanthem progresses systemic symptoms subside

6

7  Self-limited infection in most patients  Complications common in malnourished children, the unimmunized & those w/ congenital immunodeficiency,and leukemia  Acute complications: otitis media, pneumonia (Hecht giant cell pneumonia), diarrhea, measles encephalitis, thrombocytopenia.  Chronic complication: subacute sclerosing panencephalitis.

8  Based on Clinical picture  Laboratory confirmation is rarely needed  Measles IgM – detectable for 1 month after the illness but sensitivity is limited

9  Prevention – MMR  Acute Infection – treatment is entirely supportive (antipyretics, bed rest, adequate fluid intake)  Secondary Bacterial Infection – administration of appropriate antibiotics

10 (GERMAN MEASLES / 3 DAYS MEASLES)

11  Common benign childhood infection manifested by a characteristic exanthem and lymphadenopathy  Etiology: RNA virus, genus Rubivirus, family Togaviridae  Epidemiology  Humans are the only natural host of Rubella virus  Spread by oral droplet or transplacentally to the fetus  Peak incidence is 5-14 y/o  Pathogenesis: Not well understood

12  Incubation Period: 14 to 21 days.  Prodromal phase  Mild catarrhal symptoms  In adolescents and young adults: anorexia, malaise, conjunctivitis, headache, low-grade fever, mild URT symptoms.  Retroauricular, post cervical & postoccipital lymphadenopathy  An enanthem appears just before the onset of the rash (FORCHHEIMER SPOTS)

13 Skin Lesions Petechiae on soft palate Enlarged lymph nodes

14  Maybe apparent from clinical symptoms and PE  Usually confirmed by serology or viral culture  Latex agglutination, enzyme immunoassay & fluorescent immunoassay

15  In most persons, rubella is mild  Pregnant women infected during the 1 st trimester can pass the infection transplacentally  Congenital rubella syndrome  Congenital heart defects  Cataracts  Microphthalmia  Deafness  Microcephaly  Hydrocephaly

16  Prevention – MMR  Pregnant women should not be given live rubella virus vaccine and should avoid becoming pregnant for 3 mo after they have been vaccinated  Acute Infection – symptomatic

17 FIFTH DISEASE

18  EI is a childhood exanthem occurring with primary parvovirus B19 infection  Characterized by edematous erythematous plaques on the cheeks (“slapped cheeks”) and an erythematous lacy eruption on the trunk and extremities  Transmission: Spreads via droplet aerosol

19 Intranasal inoculationIgM & IgG developExanthem appears

20  Incubation Period: 7 to 28 days  Children: Fever, malaise, headache, coryza. Headache, sore throat, fever, myalgias, nausea, diarrhea, conjunctivitis, cough may coincide with rash.  Adults: Constitutional symptoms more severe, with fever, adenopathy, arthritis/arthralgias involving small joints of hand, knees, wrists, ankles, feet. Numbness and tingling of fingers.

21 Erythema Infectiosum Diffuse erythema and edema of the cheeks with “slapped cheek” facies in a child

22  Usually based on clinical presentation of the typical rash  Serologic test for B19  PCR, nucleic acid hybridization

23  “Slapped cheeks” lesions fade over 1 to 4 days. Eruption lasts for 5-9 days but can recur  Arthralgia is self-limited  In patients w/ chronic hemolytic anemias transient aplastic may occur  Fetal B19 infection may be complicated by nonimmune fetal hydrops secondary to infection of erythroid precursors

24  No specific antiviral therapy  IVIG have been used to treat episodes of anemia and bone marrow failure

25 EXANTHEM SUBITUM

26  Exanthema subitum (sudden rash) is associated with primary HHV-6 and HHV-7 infection, characterized by the sudden appearance of rash as high-fever lysis in a healthy-appearing infant  Primary infection is acquired via oropharyngeal secretions  Pathogenesis of ES rash is not known

27  Incubation period: 7 -17 days  High fever with morning remission until the 4 th day when it falls to normal coincident with the appearance of rash  Infant remarkably well despite high fever  In Asian countries, ulcers at the uvulo- palatoglossal junction (NAGAYAMA SPOTS) are common.

28  Multiple, blanchable macules and papules on the back of a febrile child, which appeared as the temperature fell

29  Based on age, history and PE findings  Serology, virus culture, Antigen detection and PCR

30  Self-limited with rare sequelae  High fever maybe associated w/ seizures  HHV-6 & HHV-7 persist throughout the life of the patient

31  Treatment is supportive (antipyretics, bed rest, adequate fluid intake)

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33 RUBEOLARUBELLAROSEOLA ERYTHEMA INFECTIOSUM Etiology ParamyxoviridaeTogaviridaeVirus (prob) Incubation Period 10 – 1214 - 217 - 177 - 28 Epid All ages6 -18 monthsAll agesRarely > 3 y/o Rash Maculopapular Distribution Begins face, spread rapidly Begins trunk → arms & neck face- legs – 3d Last for 24 hr…. Prodrome 3 – 5 d low-mod fever, hackhing cough, coryza, conjunctivitis, kopliks after 2-3 days Mild catarrhal, retroauricular, post cervical, post occipital lymphadenopathy None

34 RUBEOLARUBELLA ROSEOLA ERYTHEMA INFECTIOSUM Fever pattern ↑ T abruptly as rash appears ↓ T when rash reaches legs & feet Sudden onset ↑ T ↓ T on 3 rd -4 th d as rashes appear Absent or low grade InfectivityIsolate- 7 th d post exposure unti l 5 d after rash appeared 9 th – 10 th d post exposure (peak) 3 rd day of fever and 1 st day of rash RashLateral neck, ears, hairline → back, abdomen, thigh → feet on 2 nd Absence of PE findings to explain fever, trunk and extremities Rash 3 stages 1.Slapped cheek 2.Maculopapular on 3 rd as face fades 3.Lacy or reticulated appearance rash – fades central clearing pruritic lasts 2-39 days

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