National Post

Key facts about this highly contagious disease

- SHARON KIRKEY

Measles cases are surfacing across Canada. Here’s what you need to know about what measles is, how it spreads and symptoms to watch out for.

WHAT IS MEASLES?

Measles a highly contagious respirator­y illness caused by the rubeola virus. “Measles is probably the most transmissi­ble virus affecting human beings,” said Mcgill University professor of medicine Dr. Brian Ward.

Measles is airborne. It can be transmitte­d in schools, on buses, even during a passing interactio­n, Ward said. “If you’re in a Place des Arts (a major performing arts centre) auditorium, and there’s one person at the same show as you, and they are starting to sniffle or cough or sneeze with measles, and you’re susceptibl­e, you will probably get it.”

Before vaccines and routine childhood immunizati­ons were introduced, measles infected most people before the age of 20 and caused more than two million deaths worldwide each year.

WHAT ARE THE SYMPTOMS AND HOW SOON DO THEY APPEAR?

Symptoms include a high fever, cough, runny nose, watery eyes or pink eye. They appear seven to 14 days after contact with the virus.

The rash appears three to five days after the first symptoms and usually starts as flat red spots on the face at the hairline, which then spread downward, head to toe.

People are infectious before they start to show symptoms, and highly infectious for several days when they’re symptomati­c, before the body takes over and clears the virus, Ward said.

WHO IS MOST AT RISK OF COMPLICATI­ONS FROM MEASLES?

Infants who aren’t old enough to get the measles vaccine, kids and teens who haven’t gotten two doses of the vaccine, pregnant women and people with weak immune systems are most at risk.

Common complicati­ons in children include an ear infection and diarrhea. One in 10 may develop pneumonia. One in 1,000 can developed post-infectious encephalom­yelitis, or swelling of the brain, that can lead to permanent neurologic­al deficits like deafness, paralysis or difficulty thinking or speaking.

One to three of every 1,000 children infected will die from respirator­y or neurologic­al complicati­ons.

HOW EFFECTIVE IS THE MMR (MEASLES, MUMPS AND RUBELLA) VACCINE?

A single dose is about 93 per cent effective against measles; two doses starting after 12 months are about 96 to 97 per cent effective, which means that three to four per cent of those vaccinated can still get measles.

In Canada, kids are vaccinated at 12 months of age and then again between four and six years of age.

The measles vaccine contains a live, attenuated virus, “meaning you don’t want to give it to pregnant people,” said Dr. Caitlin Dunne, a reproducti­ve specialist with the Pacific Centre for Reproducti­ve Medicine in Vancouver. Women who are planning to get pregnant should wait a month, post-vaccinatio­n, before trying to conceive.

If a woman contracts measles during pregnancy, it can lead to birth complicati­ons like preterm birth and low birth weight infants, as well as serious pneumonia or respirator­y illness in the mother, Dunne said.

When women are planning pregnancy, or are already pregnant, doctors check their blood for antibodies against rubella, or German measles, which can cause serious birth defects, such as brain abnormalit­ies. “If someone is not properly immunized or immune to rubella, it may indicate as well that they’re also not immune to measles,” Dunne said, which could put the woman or her pregnancy at risk.

“The best advice is to get your vaccines on schedule and if you’re not sure if you’ve been vaccinated, see your health-care provider. They may recommend a booster or a blood test to see your level of immunity, particular­ly if you are immunocomp­romised, a younger person or planning a pregnancy.”

WHAT IF I’VE BEEN EXPOSED TO MEASLES?

The vaccines were invented in the mid to late’60s; different provinces introduced the shots at different times. “After 1970, basically all provinces were rapidly introducin­g (measles vaccines),” said Ward, of Mcgill. “Because measles was so transmissi­ble, the assumption we work on is that anybody born before 1970 was infected at one point in their lives,” and immunity after the disease is considered lifelong.

Immunity after vaccinatio­n falls off slowly, Ward said. “There are a small number of people who have had two doses of vaccinatio­n who will, at some point in their life, become susceptibl­e again, probably not within 10 to 15 years of being vaccinated, but maybe 30 years after vaccinatio­n,” Ward said.

“But if the vast majority of people around you are vaccinated — and public health people put that number at around 95 per cent — then the chance of you being exposed is very, very small.”

 ?? DAVID MCNEW / GETTY IMAGES ?? A single dose of the vaccine is about 93 per cent effective against measles. Two doses starting after 12 months are about 96 to 97 per cent effective.
DAVID MCNEW / GETTY IMAGES A single dose of the vaccine is about 93 per cent effective against measles. Two doses starting after 12 months are about 96 to 97 per cent effective.

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