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Smallpox (variola)
Smallpox is a relatively old disease. Smallpox (variola) is a contagious, disfiguring and often deadly disease caused by the variola virus. Smallpox infection was eliminated from the world in 1977. Naturally occurring smallpox was finally eradicated worldwide in the 1970s - the result of a concerted immunization campaign. But the virus didn't disappear entirely. Stocks of smallpox virus, set aside for research purposes, are officially stored in two high-security World Health Organization (WHO) labs - one in the United States and one in Siberia. This has lead to concerns that smallpox might be used as an agent in biological warfare. Most often, the virus is transmitted through particles that are released into the air when an infected person coughs, sneezes or simply talks. But it can also spread through direct contact such as kissing or through contaminated bed linen and clothing. Inhaling a single virus particle may be enough to cause infection. Smallpox has the potential to spread rapidly - an epidemic could conceivably start with one infected individual. Once symptoms develop, there's no effective treatment for smallpox and no known cure, but a vaccine is available that can protect against the disease. Signs and symptoms The first symptoms of smallpox usually appear 12 to 14 days after you're infected. During the incubation period of seven to 17 days, you look and feel healthy and can't infect others. Following the incubation period, a sudden onset of flu-like signs and symptoms occurs. These include: A few days later, the characteristic smallpox rash appears as flat, red spots (lesions). Within a day or two, these lesions become filled with clear fluid (vesicles) and then with pus (pustules). The rash appears first on your face, hands and forearms and later on the trunk. It's usually most noticeable on the palms of your hands and the soles of your feet. Lesions also develop in the mucous membranes of your nose and mouth. The way the lesions are distributed is a hallmark of smallpox and a primary way of diagnosing the disease. When the pustules erupt, the skin doesn't break, but actually separates from its underlying layers. The pain can be excruciating. Scabs begin to form eight to nine days later and eventually fall off, leaving deep, pitted scars. All lesions in a given area progress at the same rate through these stages. People who don't recover usually die during the second week of illness.
Smallpox vs. chickenpox
Causes The variola virus causes smallpox. Under high magnification, variola particles look like rectangles with a deeply patterned surface. They're sometimes referred to as bricks. Each brick is composed of at least a hundred different proteins. Although extraordinarily large for a virus, 3 million smallpox bricks lined end to end would be no larger than the period at the end of a sentence. Once you're infected, the virus immediately begins replicating inside your cells first in the lymph nodes and then in your spleen and bone marrow. Eventually, the virus settles in the blood vessels in your skin and the mucous membranes of your nose and throat. When the lesions in your mouth slough off, they release large amounts of the virus into your saliva. This is when you're most likely to transmit the disease to others.
How smallpox spreads Smallpox outbreaks typically occur in two-week intervals. Initially, just a few people get sick. Fourteen days later, a larger number of people develop the disease, and in another two weeks, even more cases appear. This pattern reflects the incubation period of the virus as well as its exponential spread.
Types of smallpox Smallpox also occurs in two rare forms:
Screening and diagnosis Trained health workers can diagnose smallpox without the need for laboratory tests. The World Health Organization provides training materials to help health staff recognize smallpox and distinguish it from chickenpox. Still, an initial case of smallpox is likely to be confirmed by laboratory testing. Even a single confirmed case of smallpox would be considered an international health emergency to be reported immediately to local health authorities and national officials. Complications Historically, variola major is fatal in about 30 percent of people who contract it. Almost no one survives the hemorrhagic and malignant forms of the disease. People who recover from smallpox usually have severe scars, especially on their face, arms and legs. In many cases, smallpox may lead to blindness. Treatment No cure for smallpox currently exists. There's some evidence that cidofovir an antiviral medication normally used to treat an infection known as cytomegalovirus (CMV) might prevent smallpox if it's administered within a day or two of exposure. The smallpox vaccine itself can prevent or lessen the severity of the disease if given within four days of infection. But neither of these is useful once signs and symptoms develop, and both can have serious side effects. For now, the best that doctors can offer people with symptomatic smallpox is supportive therapy and antibiotics to prevent secondary infections. Apart from immediate vaccination, isolation is the only way to manage the disease. Unfortunately, isolation can only contain the spread of the virus, not eradicate it. In most cases, people with confirmed cases of smallpox would be treated in separate hospitals, in other special facilities or at home. Those admitted to regular hospitals are likely to be confined to negative-pressure rooms the pressure outside the room is greater than the pressure inside that have highly sophisticated air filtration systems. Strict precautions would be taken with bed linen and clothing. Even so, the risk is so high that all hospital employees as well as most other patients would probably be vaccinated against the disease. Prevention Smallpox is one of the most devastating of human diseases. In its 12,000-year history, it has probably killed more people than any other illness including the plague. Yet no naturally occurring smallpox cases have been reported for nearly 25 years. The story of smallpox prevention and its eventual eradication through immunization is a long and compelling one.
Smallpox vaccine Eventually these methods collectively known as variolation reached Europe and the New World. There, as elsewhere, variolation had varying degrees of success. Some people became immune, but others contracted the disease and died or became the source of a new epidemic. Still, by the early 1700s, "do-it-yourself" smallpox inoculation had become widespread. In 1788, the scientist Edward Jenner inoculated a healthy, 8-year-old boy with cowpox a disease caused by a virus that closely resembles variola. Cowpox's natural hosts are small mammals such as wood mice, but the virus can spread to other animals, especially cattle, and lesions on the udders and teats of cows can infect people who milk them. Although rare today, cowpox was widespread in 18th-century Europe, where it was common knowledge that milkmaids who had been infected with cowpox which is generally mild were then immune to the far more deadly disease, smallpox. Jenner's experiment was a success. His patient failed to contract smallpox, even when deliberately exposed to variola. By 1800, cowpox vaccinations (the word vaccine is from the Latin vacca, for "cow") were commonplace, primarily because they caused fewer side effects and deaths than variolation with smallpox itself. Smallpox vaccine that was used until vaccinations were stopped contained live vaccinia virus a virus similar to cowpox and closely related to variola. Before 1972, most young children were vaccinated against smallpox, as were military recruits and many people traveling out of the country. In 1967, the World Health Organization launched a global immunization campaign to eradicate smallpox. At that time, 2 million to 3 million people died of smallpox every year. The WHO efforts were remarkably effective, and the last naturally occurring case of smallpox was reported in 1977. In 1980, smallpox vaccinations were discontinued worldwide.
The vaccine today Evidence from the vaccination of some military personnel and health care professionals also suggests that the smallpox vaccine may cause inflammation of the heart (myocarditis), inflammation of the membrane covering the heart (pericarditis), or a combination of these two conditions (myopericarditis).
Who should not receive the vaccinia vaccination
If you were vaccinated before 1972 AMA Urges Caution On Mass Smallpox Vaccination The AMA voted December 4 to take a cautious approach to any national smallpox vaccination program, urging the federal government to wait for good science before ordering vaccinations for all Americans. The smallpox vaccine is associated with a number of side effects and vaccinating every American could result in as many as 300 deaths. The Florida delegation backed the resolution that asked the AMA to "provide federal authority and funding for direct conversion of all available and appropriate vaccine facilities to create doses sufficient to appropriately vaccinate the entire population of the United States for smallpox." Smallpox vaccination plans have gathered momentum because the viral infection could be used as a potent bioterrorism weapon. Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson announced plans to buy as many as 300 million doses of smallpox vaccine. Instead of endorsing universal smallpox vaccination, the AMA House approved a resolution that asks for more study of "risks and benefits of pre-exposure vaccination of the US population," while plans for mass vaccination continue. The American Medical Association's (AMA) House of Delegates December 4, 2001 San Francisco, CASmallpox Vaccine Provides Long-term Immunity The researchers evaluated how immune system cells responded when participants were exposed to vaccinia, a virus related to the smallpox virus used in vaccines to trigger immunity to smallpox. What were the results of vaccinia exposure? Exposure to vaccinia produced a robust response in people who had been vaccinated in recent years. The response was still considerable in people who had been vaccinated 6 to 35 years before. People who had been vaccinated more than 35 years ago still had a considerable immune response. When was the smallpox vaccine used? The smallpox vaccine was required for school entry in the U.S. prior to 1972. About 60 percent of the US population is vaccinated. The eradication of smallpox was officially declared in 1980, and according to the World Health Organization, national vaccination programs stopped in all countries by the early 1980s. What are the symptoms of smallpox? The initial signs of smallpox infection include headache, vomiting and fever. Then pus-filled lesions form on the head and face, and may also appear on other parts of the body. What treatments exist for smallpox? There is no treatment for the disease, which is fatal 20 percent to 40 percent of the time in unvaccinated people. However, if an individual has been exposed to the virus and is vaccinated within the next 4 days, the vaccine can reduce symptoms or prevent the disease. Does smallpox still exist? Officially, smallpox exists in only two laboratories -- one in the US and the other in Russia. However, there are some concerns that other organizations may have samples of the deadly virus. The New England Journal of Medicine August 29, 2002;347:689-690Related Site: Treatments Treatments Programs:
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