Rubella Flashcards
1
Q
1) What is rubella (german measles)?
A
- It is a viral exanthem caused by a togavirus
- It is seen less frequently in GP due to immunisation
2
Q
Describe the aetiology of rubella
A
- It is spread by droplet from the nose and throat from infected contacts
- 1/3rd of infection is subclinical
- Infection confers lifelong immunity
- Incubation period is 14-21 days
3
Q
What are the clinical features of rubella?
A
- Generalised maculopapular rash (not confluent) first appearing on the neck and face and spreads to trunks and extremities
- No prodrome
- Reddened pharynx
- Low grade fever
- Small joint polyarthritis, headache, myalgia and conjunctivitis
- Post-auricular, suboccipital and postcervical lymphadenopathy
- Infectious upto 7 days before and for 5 days from onset of rash
- No staining or desquamation of skin
- 1/3 can be subclinical
4
Q
How to diagnose?
A
- Clinical features
- Rubella serology (IgG and IgM) or virus culture
5
Q
How to manage rubella?
A
- Symptomatic management including rest, paracetamol as rubella is a mild disease
- Child excluded from school until fully recovered or upto 5 days form onset of the rash
6
Q
Who are the high-rsk groups for rubella?
A
- Travellers to and from areas where rubella vaccination is not widespread
- Childcare workers
- Health care workers
- Unborn babies whose mothers have low or non-existent
7
Q
Key features in history of patient to arrive at a diagnosis of rubella?
A
- Immunisation status
- Travel history
- Examination of the nature of the rash and associated symptoms
- Previous rubella infection
8
Q
What is the indication for rubella vaccine in Australia?
A
- 12 months-MMR
- 18 months MMRV
- 4 years MMR
- Catch up vaccination upto age of 9 years
- Women planning pregnancy or shortly after delivery if no immunity to rubella (2 doses 1 month apart)
- Aborginal people, refugees and asylum seekers eight years and over can get catch up vaccination
- MMRV not recommended over 14 years
- Adults born before 1966 do not need rubella vaccine
- People working with children
9
Q
What are the contraindications to rubella vaccine?
A
- HIV or AIDS infection
- Pregnancy
- On high dose corticosteroids
- On immunosuppressive treatment such as chemotherapy
- Having a malignancy such as Hodgkins
- Immunodeficiency with extremely low levels of antibodies such as hypogammaglobulinaemia
10
Q
What are the complications of rubella?
A
- Usually recover within three days
- Otitis media and encephalitis (rare 1 in 5000)
- Polyarthritis
- Congenital rubella syndrome when mother contracts the infection during the first 10 weeks of pregnancy. Birth defects include deafness, blindness, intellectual disability, heart defects and impaired growth
11
Q
How to manage rubella exposure in pregnancy?
A
- If immune status known and immune- No risk to the foetus
- If immune status unknown- rubella serology is the next step
- Rubella IgM rises 7-10 days after infectionand indicated recent infection; hence repeat test i 14-21 days
- No apparent risk after 19 weeks; upto 85% risk <12 weeks and falls to 10% at 19 weeks.
- If IgM found positive, isolate, notify PHU and urgent referral to Paediatrician for counselling; termination offered if first trimester, fetal tesint in second trimester
- Avoid exposure to anyone with rubella/rash if not immune
12
Q
How to interpret rubella serology?
A
- IgG and IgM negative-susceptibe to infection
- IgG and IgM positive-reinfection/recent infection
- IgG negative and IgM positive-Recent infection
- IgG positive and IgM negative-Previous infection/immunisation
- Always retest in 14-21 days