ToRCH & Childhood Diseases

Rubella Rubella, also known as German Measles, is a viral illness caused by a togavirus of the genus Rubivirus and is an infection that primarily affects the skin and lymph nodes. It is generally a mild disease in adults and children, but it can have devastating effects on infants.

The primary medical danger of rubella is the infection of pregnant women, because it can cause congenital rubella syndrome (CRS) in developing fetus. Since the introduction of the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine, rubella is much less common, however, several countries still do not include this vaccine in their immunization schedule. In the absence of vaccination, rubella is an endemic disease with epidemics every 6 to 9 years. Rubella is spread by coughing and sneezing. The virus resides in the nose and throat of an infected person with an average incubation period of 14-21 days. A person infected with rubella may spread the disease to others beginning one week before the rash occurs. Symptoms generally occur 2-3 weeks after exposure to the virus and includes a mild fever, headache and runny nose.

COUNTRIES USING RUBELLA VACCINE IN NATIONAL IMMUNIZATION SCHEDULE, 2012

Source: WHO/UNICEF coverage estimates 2012 revision, July 2013. 194 WHO Member States. Map production: Immunization Vaccines and Biologicals, (IVB). World Health Organization Date of slide: 24 July 2013.

CONGENITAL RUBELLA SYNDROME (CRS)

DIAGNOSIS Rubella virus can be detected from nasal, throat, urine, and blood specimens from infected individuals. Diagnosis is usually made by the detection of Rubella-specific IgM antibodies which are usually present 4–30 days after the onset of illness. However, reliable serodiagnosis requires the discrimination of specific IgM primary rubella from persistent, reactivated or non-specific IgM reactivity. Recent infection can be confirmed or excluded by additional assays such as Rubella IgG avidity and immunoblot analysis. A rubella infection just before conception (0-28 days) or during the first trimester in pregnancy has the highest rate of transmission to the fetus (90%) resulting in congenital rubella syndrome (CRS). At 14 weeks, this incidence is reduced to 52%, and by the end of the second trimester, the incidence drops to 25%. Fetal rubella infection often results in spontaneous abortion or severe fetal defects, including heart, brain, ear or eye malformations, deafness, microcephaly, and mental retardation. Before the introduction of the vaccine, up to 4 babies in every 1000 live births were born with CRS.

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ToRCH & Childhood Diseases- Reagents for Assay Development

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