Measles
Measles
Measles
Measles (Rubeola)
1
Anbar Medical College
Department of Family and Community Medicine
Epidemiology of Communicable Diseases
Dr. Ahmed Al-Delaimy MBChB, MSc, PhD
MMR Vaccine
First dose of MMR at 12-15 months
Second dose of MMR at 4-6 years
Second dose may be given any time at least 4 weeks
after the first dose
For the first dose of measles, mumps, rubella, and
varicella vaccines either MMR and varicella vaccines or
MMRV vaccine can be used
For the second dose at any age, use of MMRV vaccine
generally is preferred.
Fever 5-15%
Rash 5%
Thrombocytopenia, Lymphadenopathy, and allergic are
rare.
Host factors:
o Nutrition: measles tend to be sever in
malnourished children.
o Infant: are usually immune during the first few
months of life through the transplacental
transmission of passive immunity from the
mothers.
o Large epidemic waves occur on alternative years
in densely populated urban areas, but at longer
interval in rural areas.
o The explosive outbreak seems to occur only when
there has been a sufficient accumulation of
susceptible children.
Lab. Diagnosis:
2
Anbar Medical College
Department of Family and Community Medicine
Epidemiology of Communicable Diseases
Dr. Ahmed Al-Delaimy MBChB, MSc, PhD
Control:
1- Isolation of children for 4 weeks who have measles is of
limited value in the control of infection because it’s
highly infectious in the prodromal phase before the
characteristic rash appears.
2- Quarantine to contacts for 15 days.
3- Active immunization: the best means of reducing the
incidence of measles is by having an immune
population, children should be vaccinated at 12 months,
with one dose of live attenuated measles virus vaccine,
gives about 12 years protection. vaccine must be kept in
a temperature between 2 and 8 C, and protected from
light.
4- Passive immunization: artificial passive immunization
using immune gamma globulin (0.25 ml/ kg) is given
early within 3 days of exposure regardless of
vaccination status, the infection will be prevented.
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Antibiotics can be used for bacterial complication
Supportive treatment: ( to prevent complication)
Vitamin A is administered once a day for 2 days at the
following doses:
50,000 IU for infants aged <6 months
100,000 IU for infants aged 6–11 months
200,000 IU for children aged ≥12 months
3
Anbar Medical College
Department of Family and Community Medicine
Epidemiology of Communicable Diseases
Dr. Ahmed Al-Delaimy MBChB, MSc, PhD
This disease is often mild of low grade fever and sore throat.
The disease can last one to five days. Children recover more
quickly than adults. Rash may start 2 weeks after exposure
and lasts for 3 days (itchy and less bright than measles).
Is an acute viral infection (Rubella Virus) which presents with
fever, mild upper respiratory symptoms, lymphadenopathy
affecting post-cervical and sub-occipital. During the first
trimester of pregnancy is associated with abortion and high
risk (up to 20%) of congenital abnormalities in the fetus. the
child may be born with congenital rubella syndrome (CRS).
Deafness, congenital heart abnormality, cataract. More
serious in the first 2 months of gestation.
I.P: 2-3 weeks
Aetiological agent is the rubella virus.
Epidemiology: world wide, humans are the reservoir of
infection, transmission by droplets or by direct or indirect
contact.
Lab. Diagnosis:
Specific IgM antibodies and M-antibodies.
Clinical differentiation from other mild infection difficult.
Control:
- Vaccination of prepubertal girls with a single dose.
- Any pregnant women who has in contact with the
disease should be protected with human
immunoglobulin.
Acute febrile
illness with
characteristic
skin rash appears
4
Anbar Medical College
Department of Family and Community Medicine
Epidemiology of Communicable Diseases
Dr. Ahmed Al-Delaimy MBChB, MSc, PhD
first in abdomen,back, face and then spread all over the body.
incubation period usually from 10 -21 days.
Common infection all over the world.
Mode of transmission is directly through droplet infection
from respiratory tract. Or indirectly from soiled articles.
Infectious remains from 1-2 days before the rash appears and
until the blisters (itchy) have formed scabs.
In most cases its mild, self-limiting disease. More sever in
adults. One attack usually gives lifelong immunity.
Lab. Dx: virus cultured or identified immunologically from the
early skin lesions or from throat.
Control: first exclude small pox. Patient are isolated from
susceptible persons.