The devastating, crippling poliovirus has
made a comeback in the Middle East and Africa, sparking a very high level of
concern in U.S. health officials who warn that a return of the disease is only
an international flight away.
by John
Tyburski
Copyright © Daily Digest News, KPR Media, LLC. All rights reserved.
The
poliovirus, a RNA virus that was first isolated in 1909 and is one of the most
well-characterized viruses, is making a comeback abroad and posing a serious
threat in the U.S. that has officials calling for renewed, strict diligence in
vaccinating children against this crippling and deadly disease. According to a statement by
the World Health Organization’s (WHO) International Health Regulations
Emergency Committee, new wild poliovirus infection cases have been documented
in Afghanistan, Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Ethiopia, Israel, Nigeria,
Pakistan, Somalia, and the Syrian Arab Republic. International spread of the
virus in 2014 was declared an “extraordinary event” that presents a substantial
public health risk to other nations.
Poliovirus
is spread primarily by the fecal-oral route and is present in saliva and feces.
It causes poliomyelitis, an infection with the virus that if spread to the
blood stream can selectively attack and destroy motor neurons, resulting in
paralysis or flaccidity in skeletal muscles. Only about one percent of
infections enter the blood stream and cause neurological damage. However, the
neurological effects of poliomyelitis are permanent. The disease is
vaccine-preventable and was eradicated from the U.S. by 1979 through childhood
vaccination.
Poliovirus
vaccines are still used today. However, in recent years more and more parents
have been delaying vaccines or opting to skip them altogether. Poliomyelitis
can infect anyone, not just children. In fact, the risk of paralytic
poliomyelitis increases alarmingly with age, and adults are at great risk of
infection if never vaccinated.
“If there’s
a lesson for us here in the United States, it’s that we have to keep
vaccinating absolutely every child,” said Dr. William Schaffner, chair of
preventive medicine at Vanderbilt University. “If polio is reintroduced into
this country, it will find those children whose parents are stretching out
their immunization schedules, leaving them susceptible for longer periods of
time.”
The WHO
Emergency Committee statement identified Pakistan, Cameroon, and the Syrian
Arab Republic as the most likely nations to export wild poliovirus. The
Committee gave recommendations to these nations and the nations with infections
but that are not exporting the virus at present.
No comments:
Post a Comment