MEASLES Flashcards
Describe the three (3) forms of measles disease in the CNS, with respect to who is affected, the incubation period, the pathogenesis, and disease progression (12)
- Acute measles post-infectious encephalitis – affects immunocompetent people, occurs within days to weeks of acute measles onset, a form of ADEM/PIEM – autoimmune, recovery varies – 15% fatal, 30% permanent neurological damage
- Measles inclusion body encephalitis – affects immunocompromised people, weeks to months after acute measles, virus present and replicating in the brain, uniformly fatal, rapid progression in HIV
- Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE) – affects immunocompetent people, occurs years after primary measles infection, partly replication deficient virus in the brain, slowish progression to death in all cases.
Briefly describe measles inclusion body encephalitis under the following headings:
a) affected population (2) and
b) clinical progression (3)
- Immune-compromised patients
- Children with leukaemia receiving radiation therapy
- HIV: accelerated process
- Incubation period - a few weeks to 6 months
- Convulsions, usually myoclonic jerks
- Mostly limited to one side
a. Hemiplegia and/or decreased consciousness
b. Death within a few months, 100% mortality
Name the three (3) forms of encephalitis caused by measles and state their probable outcome (3)
Acute post-infectious measles encephalitis variable, most recover; measles inclusion body encephalitis, invariably fatal; subacute sclerosing pan-encephalitis, invariably fatal.
Name three (3) forms of measles encephalitis and for each state the timing of the onset of encephalitis (3)
- Acute measles post-infectious encephalitis [days-a few weeks after infection],
- measles inclusion body encephalitis [weeks-months],
- Sub-acute Sclerosing PanEncephalitis [years]