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Epidemic mumps: why should you get vaccinated?

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Why should vaccination be done?

Mumps – what you need to know about the disease.

A case of epidemic parotitis was registered in Ivano-Frankivsk. The child was not vaccinated due to the parents’ refusal.

Epidemic parotitis parotitis epidemica; folk – mumps, mumps – an acute highly contagious infectious disease characterized by fever, general intoxication, damage to the salivary glands, parotid glands, sometimes the pancreas, thyroid or parathyroid gland, and sometimes other glands (gonadal, mammary, pancreatic), central nervous systems

Today, mumps remains one of the most widespread and contagious infections in the world. Special attention is paid to this disease due to the large number of established serious complications: male infertility, eunuchoidism, type 2 diabetes, chronic pancreatitis, damage to the central nervous system.

The disease is caused by a virus from the family of paramyxoviruses, which multiplies in the upper respiratory tract, enters the blood and affects the entire body. The disease occurs most often in children, aged 3 to 15 years, after which immunity to the disease remains for life. But adults also get sick

The virus is not resistant to environmental factors: heating and drying, irradiation and exposure to chemicals (chlorine, formalin, Lysol, etc.), but it is quite resistant to low temperatures.

The only source of infection is patients with various forms (typical and erased, subclinical) diseases. The patient begins to release the virus into the environment 3 days before the onset of acute manifestations of the disease and within 9 days after the onset of the disease

The mechanism of transmission of infection is airborne. Saliva, droplets of nasopharyngeal mucus containing the virus can be transmitted through the air to another person when sneezing, coughing, talking, or by direct contact through hands contaminated with secretions, unwashed dishes, or other contaminated objects.

Epidemic parotitis affects men 2 times more often with the occurrence of obvious (symptomatic) manifestations than girls and women. The infectious process is seasonal, the disease is observed most in the spring, especially in April and May.

Salivary gland lesions are the most common. From the entrance gates, which are the mucous membranes of the oral cavity, nose, and pharynx, the virus enters the blood and spreads throughout the body: to the salivary, genital, and pancreatic glands, the central nervous system, and other organs. In cases of parotid serous meningitis, morphological changes are nonspecific (hyperemia, cerebral edema, perivascular infiltration of meninges). Similar changes are observed in other glandular organs (testicles, pancreas, occasionally mammary glands, ovaries).

The main manifestations of epidemic parotitis develop in 3-4 days of illness and are accompanied by febrile fever, intoxication manifestations, dry mouth.

Initially, swelling of the parotid salivary gland occurs on one side or the other, and after 1-2 days, the other parotid gland may be involved in the process. In addition to the parotid salivary glands, the submandibular and sublingual salivary glands may be less often involved in the process. Frequent damage to the parotid glands, rather than other salivary glands, is associated with a low antiviral activity of the saliva of the parotid glands, greater – of the submandibular glands, and the strongest antiviral activity of the saliva of the sublingual gland.

The parotid salivary gland is enlarged, protrudes from the upper branch of the lower jaw in the form of a swelling that fills the space between the mastoid process and the branch of the lower jaw (retromaxillary). Swelling can spread to the cheek, to the nipple, and to the neck. The skin over the salivary gland has no signs of inflammation, but it looks stretched, the salivary gland is elastic, relatively painful. Patients complain of pain when chewing, especially hard food.

When the parotid salivary glands are affected, characteristic changes can be seen in the oral cavity in the form of swelling, hyperemia of the mucous membrane around the opening of the salivary parotid (stenon) duct (Moors’ symptom), discharge of thick mucus from it. The affected submandibular salivary glands are more painful on palpation, but they are also elastic to the touch. Damage to the sublingual gland is manifested by pain at the root of the tongue. From the 5th day, the reverse development of symptoms is observed.

A longer period of fever and intoxication is noted in cases where the infection spreads to other glands. Each spread of the virus to other glands is accompanied by a new rise in fever, often with moderate chills. The criteria for the severity of the course of epidemic parotitis are determined by how significant the general and local signs of the disease are: fever, intoxication, the presence or absence of complications. Uncomplicated epidemic parotitis is usually mild, less often it is of moderate severity, and severe forms always have complications (often multiple):

Thanks to routine vaccination against infection, outbreaks of mumps are relatively rare today, and occur mainly in crowded, closed spaces such as schools, orphanages, military camps, etc. And mostly unvaccinated, unvaccinated people get sick

Vaccinate on time. Take care of your health!

Epidemiologist, Department of Epidemiological Surveillance and Prevention of Infectious Diseases of the Yavoriv District Department of the Lviv Regional Center for Disease Control and Prevention
Vera Levitska

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