Title: Infectious Disease
1Infectious Disease Immunity
2Part 1
- 1) Immune System
- 2) Vaccinations
- 3) Vaccine Preventable Diseases
3Part 2
- 1) Assessing the Febrile Child
- 2) Common Childhood Infections
- 3) Antibiotic choices
- 4) Immunodeficiencies
41 Immune System
5Immune system
- Neonates have immature immune system
- (esp. adaptive system lymphocytes, antibodies)
- Lymphocytes ? (thymus) mature with antibody
production relative to exposure - Foetal/ Neonatal monocytes, mØ slow to process
foreign antigens - Infants produce a/b against simple proteins
- (eg. Vaccines) not polysaccharides until 2 years
6- Foetal Lymphocytes from 9/40 in liver
- Bone, liver, spleen 12/40
- T-cells from 14/40
- In utero sterile environment (ideally)
- Therefore no anti-bodies produced
- Mums IgG only crosses placenta
7Neonatal antibodies
- IgG Transplacental ie maternal
- T1/2 21 days
- Nadir at 3-5months
- Infants own IgG takes over
- 60 of adults level at 1 year
- 100 by 6-10 years
- IgM v low at birth 75 adult level at 1 yr
- IgA, IgD, IgE 10-40 at 1 yr
8- Exposure 7-8 viral infections/yr
- ? with contacts (creche / school)
- Vast array of childhood infections from benign to
critical your job to find out which
9Hygiene Hypothesis
- ? allergic / immune-mediated disorders in
developed nations - ? too clean environment
- Microbial exposure needed
- Causes shift from predominance of Th1 to Th2
cells, causing over-production of IgE etc. - Hypersensitivity ensues
- J Hopkins T Shirakawa Science 1997
10Immune system in balance
- Infection viral/bacterial/opportunistic
- Hypersensitivity Allergy, Atopy, Intolerance
- Autoimmune disorders
- Immunodeficencies
- Therapeutic Vaccinations
- Monoclonal antibodies
- IVIG
112 Vaccinations
- Medicines greatest lifesaver
12Ireland 12 vaccines
- Mycobacterium BCG x 1
- Diphtheria
- Tetanus
- Pertussis 6in1 x 3
- Polio
- Haemophilus influenza b
- Hepatitis B
- Meningococcal C Men C x 3
- Pneumococcus PCV x 3
- Measles
- Mumps MMR x 2
- Rubella
13Age Vaccination
Birth BCG
2 months 6in1 PCV
4 months 6in1 Men C
6 months 6in1 Men C PCV
12 months MMR PCV
13 months Men C Hib
4 5 years 4in1 MMR
11-14 years Td
14Those born before July 2008
Age Vaccine
Birth BCG
2 months 5in1, MenC
4 months 5in1, MenC
6 months 5in1, MenC
12-15 months MMR, Hib
4-5 years 4in1, MMR
- No Routine Hepatitis B or Pneumococcal vaccine
- PCV Catch-up programme (for lt2 year olds)
15Why Immunise?
- In 1974, only 5 of the worlds children had
access to vaccines. - A global effort in the early 80s aimed to
provide six vaccines to 80 of children worldwide - Immunisation now saves gt3,000,000 lives each year
- Protects millions more from illness and permanent
disability
16Other vaccines
- Influenza
- Varicella
- Hepatitis A
- HPV
- Travel vaccines
17What is immunisation?
- Immunisation is the process of inducing or
providing immunity artifically. - This may be done by the administration of a
vaccine, toxoid or externally produced antigen in
order to stimulate antibody production. - The aim to reduce the incidence of, or to
eliminate a particular disease. - Immunisation has both a direct and an indirect
effect. - Direct effect antibody protection in the
individual - Indirect effect reduction of the incidence of
the disease in others so called herd immunity
18Vaccine Considerations
- Pathogen factors How common?
- How dangerous / complications?
- Vaccine factors vaccine immunogenicity
- efficacy, side-effects risks?
- Host factors maturity immune system,
- When is infant most at risk of this disease?
- Population factors disease prevalence,
- vaccine uptake herd immunity,
- cost-benefit
19Live Attenuated Killed Orgs Subunits
Measles Polio (IPV) Hib
Mumps Men C
Rubella Pneumo (PCV)
BCG Influenza Hep B
Acellular Pertussis
Varicella Cellular Pertussis
Cholera/typhoid/ yellow fever Cholera/Typhoid/Rabies Hep A
Oral Polio
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21MMR Vaccine Is It Really A Factor In Autism?
- There has been a concern about a link between the
MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) vaccine and the
development of autism in children because
- MMR vaccine is first given at age 12 to 15 months.
- The first signs of autism (e.g. poor social
interaction and speech, repetitive behaviors)
often appear between 12 to 18 months of age.
22Independent Studies Have Found No Link Between
Autism and MMR.
- A United States study by Dr. Loring Dales showed
that the number of autism cases in young children
increased even when the number of MMR vaccines
decreased over the same time period! - A British study by Dr. Brent Taylor showed that
the number of diagnosed autism cases did not
increase after the MMR vaccine was introduced in
1988. - If a link existed between the MMR vaccine and
autism, then one would expect the number of
autism cases to increase or decrease over time as
the number of children immunised with MMR
decreases or increases over the same time. No
study has shown this trend. - Additional studies conducted in the United States
and in Europe have found no association between
the MMR vaccination and autism.
23WHO opinion on MMR
- "WHO has noted that other scientists have not
been able to reproduce the results claimed by Dr
Wakefield and his team regarding measles virus in
the gut. His published observations regarding the
onset of autism following administration of MMR
vaccine do not meet the scientific criteria
required to suggest that the vaccine is the
cause. Other studies not cited by Dr Wakefield
find no link with autism or Crohn's disease." - WHO strongly endorses the use of MMR (measles,
mumps and rubella) vaccine on the grounds of its
convincing record of safety and efficacy.
24IRISH Working Party Consensus
- The Joint Committee considers that
- there is no evidence of a proven link between MMR
and autism. - there is no evidence to show that the separate
vaccines are any safer than the combined MMR
vaccine. - Babies are very susceptible to measles, mumps and
rubella, which are killer diseases, so they much
be protected as soon as possible and this can
only be done with the MMR vaccine. - Giving separate measles, mumps and rubella
vaccines would leave children unnecessarily
exposed and vulnerable.
25Late Entrants To Irish Health Care System
- MMR Immunisation recommended
- 2 doses recommended between 12-15 mo and 4-6 yrs
at least 1 month apart - Men C recommended under 22 years
- Hib Recommended under aged 4 years
- ( 3 doses lt 1 yr, 1 dose gt 1yrs)
- Polio 4 doses recommended before the age of 4-6
yrs - DtaP recommended under 12 years
- If it is likely 3 or more doses given,
- serological testing for IgG antibodies /-
booster - If a child at presentation is gt 10yrs Td is given
26Contraindications/ Precautions
27..NOT Contraindications
- Family history of adverse reactions to
immunisations - Minor infections without fever or systemic upset
- Family hx of convulsions
- History of measles, mumps, pertussis in the
absence of proof of immunity - Childs mother is pregnant or Child being
breast-fed - Impending surgery
- Child over the recommended age
- Corticosteroid replacement therapy
28Diphtheria
- Corynebacterium diphtheriae
- Affects upper respiratory tract
- Incubation 2-5 days
- Spread droplet/close contact
- Disease characterised by an inflammatory exudate
? obstructive membrane over the airway - Other manifestation
- Myocarditis
- Vocal cord paralysis
- Guillain Barre type ascending paralysis
- Since vaccination virtually eliminated in
Ireland - Vaccine
- Toxoid
- Component of 6 in 1
- Booster at 4-5yrs and low dose booster at 11-14
yrs - Adverse reactions
- Transient local reactionc occur in gt 50
- Malaise, headache and transient fever occur
occasionally
29Tetanus
- Vaccine
- Toxoid
- Poor immunogen
- Primary immunisation
- 6 in 1, three doses
- Booster dose at school entry and at 11-14yrs
- Immunised adults who have received 5 doses do not
need further booster doses
- Clostridium tetani
- Muscular rigidity with superimposed contractions
- Organism is ubiquitous
- Nb puncture wounds, bites etc.
- Incubation period 4-21 days
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31Pertussis (Whooping cough)
- Diagnosis often clinical
- Peri-nasal swab poor yield
- Lymhocytosis
- Treatment
- Isolate
- Erythromycin reduces infectivity
- Supportive
- Vaccination
- Bordetella pertussis
- Highly infectious (90 of nonimmune contacts
acquire it) - 3 phases
- Transmitted droplets etc.
- 1-2 week incubation
- Endemic with periodic outbreaks
32100 day cough
- Catarrhal phase 1-2 weeks of low fever, URTI
- Highly infectious
- Transmission Droplet/ close contact
- Paroxysmal phase Whoop (gasps for breath between
coughing fits) 3-5 weeks - Often associated vomiting etc.
- Recovery phase 2-3 weeks
- Complications
- Apnoea in neonates
- Bronchopneumonia
- Cerebral hypoxia Seizures, Encephalopathy
- Death
33- Vaccine
- Acellular pertussis
- 6 in 1 x 3
- Booster at 4-5 yrs
- No upper age limit but considered unnecessary gt 7
yrs - Efficacy variable 35 100 in studies
- Previous concern re seizures induced by Cellular
Vaccine (not used anymore)
34Pertussis - special precautions
- Advice from the childs paediatrician may need to
be sought prior to immunisation where there is - A personal history of convulsions
- An evolving neurological problem
- If an event listed in precaution section has
occurred after a previous dose
35Poliomyelitis
- Caused by polio virus 1-3
- Transmission
- faecal/oral, droplet
- Incubation 3- 21 days
- Clinical disease
- Non-paralytic fever
- Aseptic meningitis
- Paralysis
- Most infections asymptomatic
- Pre-vaccine
- 20,000 cases/yr USA
- 1,900 deaths /yr
- Ireland most recent case 1984
- Endemic in developing world
- Vaccine
- IPV since 2001
- Part of 6 in 1
- 3 doses 4th at 4- 5 yrs
- OPV not recommended
36Haemophilus influenzae type B
- Hib vaccine introduced 1992
- 80 of invasive haemophilus infections caused by
type B - After 12 months of age, Hib disease declines
- Clinical disease includes
- Meningitis
- Epiglottis
- Septicaemia
- Cellulitis
- Osteomyelitis
- Septic arthritis
- Vaccine
- Capsular poly or oligosaccharide
- Part of 6 in 1
- 3 doses booster
- If first dose given at gt 1 yr need only 1 dose
- Children gt 4 yrs do not need immunisation with
Hib - Persons with asplenia or undergoing splenectomy
should be vaccinated
37Hib Treatment
- Index case tx with cefotaxime or ceftriaxone
- Immunise 1 month after disease if lt 2 yrs
- Household contacts / Play-group/ creche
chemoprophylaxis - Except pregnant women
- Non-immunised contacts lt 4yrs need vaccine
- All household contacts irrespective of age or
immunisation history IF there are any
unvaccinated childrenlt 4yrs - Chemoprophylaxis Rifampicin
- Neonates and infants lt 1 yr 10mg/kg od for 4
days - Children gt 1 yr 20mg/kg od for 4 days ( max
600mg/day) - Adults 600mg one daily x 4 days
38Hepatitis B
- DNA virus
- Highly contagious
- 30 transmission rate with puncture injury
- High risk contacts
- 10 chronic infection, 1 fulminant hepatitis
- Risk of Hepatocellular Ca
39Hepatitis B vaccination
- Traditionally only vaccinated high risk groups
- Sex workers
- Individuals who change sexual partner frequently
- IVDUs
- Prisoners
- Tattoo artists
- Homeless people
- Immigrants from, or travellers to, areas with a
high prevalence of HBV - Security and emergency services personnel
- Family contacts of HBV pts
- CRF / HIV / chronic hepatitis
- Healthcare workers
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41Hepatitis B vaccine
- Vaccine HBsAg in 6in1
- Primary Immunisation Schedule (since July)
- At 2, 4, 6/12
- At birth with HBIG if risk of vertical
transmission - follow-up testing
- No Catch-up unless at risk
42Meningococcus C
- Neisseria Meningitidis
- Gram neg. cocci
- Causes Meningitis, Septicaemia
- Notifiable disease
- Contact tracing chemoprophylaxis required
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45Contact tracing/ prophylaxis
- Antibiotic prophylaxis for close contacts of
confirmed or suspected cases - Close contacts defined as those who in the seven
days prior to the onset of illness in the index
case - Have shared living or sleeping accomodation
- Had mouth kissing contact with the patient
- Nursery/creche /daycare contacts
- Medical personnel who have had intimate contact
with the patient ( mouth-to-mouth, intubation) - Rifampicin is drug of choice
- Alternative prophylaxis is Ceftriaxone 250 mg im
for adults and 125mg for children - For vaccine preventable strains (A, C, W-135)
vaccination is offered.
46Streptococcal Pneumoniae
- Capsular organism
- Gram Diplococci
- Some asymptomatic carriers
- Diseases
- Meningitis with effusions
- Pneumonia with effusions
- Bacteraemia/Sepsis
- Otitis Media
- Sinusitis
47Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine
- 7 serotypes (75-80 invasive pneumococcus)
- ? immunogenicity with mutant diphtheria toxin
- gt 90 effective
- 23-valent polysaccharide available
- for high risk children gt 2years age
- eg. Asplenia
- Effective for 5 years
- Not in Primary Immunisation Schedule
48Measles
- Transmission airborne/droplet
- Incubation 10-14 days
- Clinical
- Prodrome high fever, harsh cough, coryza,
conjunctivitis, - Rash morbilliform, maculo-papular
- Begins d3-6 from hairline, down face to trunk
- Lasts up to 10/7
- Kopliks spots
49Measles (Rubeola)
- Complications
- Otitis, pneumonia, croup
- Encephalitis 1/5000 within a week of rash
- 15 Mortality
- 20-40 Neuro sequelae
- Late complication
- SSPE (subacute sclerosing panencephalitis)
1/100,000
- RNA Paramyxovirus
- Clinical diagnosis
- Salivary swab measles IgM
- Treatment
- Supportive
- Ribavirin if patient Immunocompromised
- ?Contacts
- Prevention HNIG within 6/7 if imunocompromised
contact
50Measles
- Vaccine MMR
- 12-15 months of age, 2nd dose at 4-5 yrs
- Can be given to those with history of measles,
mumps or rubella infection - Mini-measles can occur 6 -10 days after
immunisation - Mild pyrexia and erythematous rash
- Measles outbreak
- Immunise all susceptible individuals within 72
hrs - Contraindications
- Pregnancy is a contraindication and should be
avoided for 2 months after vaccination - Untreated malignancy and immunodeficiency states
(except HIV) - Immunosuppressive therapy
- History of anaphylaxis to a previous dose
51Mumps
- Acute viral illness
- Swelling of one or more salivary glands usually
the parotids - CNS involvement is frequent
- Symptomatic meningitis occurs in lt10
- Rarely transverse myelitis, cerebellar ataxia or
encephalitis can occur - Orchitis occurs in 20 of post-pubertal males
- Sterility rare
- Other manifestations
- Arthritis, carditis, nephritis, pancreatitis,
thyroiditis, hearing impairment - Transmission is by droplet
- Incubation period 12 -25 days
- Vaccine live MMR
52Rubella
- Rubella difficult to diagnose
- Fever lt38.5, LN (esp Post Triangle)
- May have splenomegaly, palatal petechiae
- Mild self limited disease in children 25 -50
subclinical - Incubation 2 3 weeks
- Infectious (droplets) for lt1wk from rash onset
- Buccal swab, urine, rising antibody titre
- Rare complications
- Polyarthralgia / Polyarthritis
- Thrombocytopenia
- Encephalitis (1 in 6000)
53Congenital Rubella
- LBW, growth retardation
- Microcephaly, learning disability, psyche
- Microphthalmia, catarract, glaucoma
- Micrognathia
- Sensori-neural deafness
- Hepato-Spleno-megaly (transient), diabetes
- Thrombocytopenic purpura blueberry muffin
- PDA
54Congenital Rubella
- 1964-1965 USA Rubella epidemic
- 12.5mil cases
- with 20,000 cases congenital rubella
- 2001 19 cases Rubella in USA
- Serology checked on antenatal booking bloods
- gt80 women infected in 1st trimester affected
infants - Infants with congenital rubella may shed virus
for over a year
55MMR
- Prevention Active vaccination
- Rubella component of MMR vaccine occasionally
produces mild arthralgia especially in post
pubertal girls (25) - Pregnancy remains a contraindication
- (no evidence of congenital rubella related to
vaccine)
56HIV And Immunisation
- Children With HIV infection whether symptomatic
or asymptomatic should receive - DtaP, IPV, Hib, Men C as per primary schedule
- Yearly influenza vaccine beginning at 6 months
- Pneumococcal (conjugate) vaccine at 2,4 and 6
months - MMR at 14 months ( unless severely
immunocompromised), 2nd dose 1-2 months later - BCG if infant has 2 negative HIV PCR tests in
the first 6 weeks of life - Hepatitis A
- Hepatitis B
57Summary
- Neonates Infants immature immune systems
- Vaccines very effective protection
- Know schedule (old new catch-up)
- Know diseases they prevent (MCQs)
58Age Vaccination
Birth BCG
2 months 6in1 PCV
4 months 6in1 Men C
6 months 6in1 Men C PCV
12 months MMR PCV
13 months Men C Hib
4 5 years 4in1 MMR
11-14 years Td