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Whooping cough

Pertussis, also known as "whooping cough," is a highly contagious disease that is one of the leading causes of vaccine-preventable deaths. There are 30–50 million cases per year, and about 300,000 deaths per year. Virtually all deaths occur in children under one year of age. Ninety percent of all cases occur in developing countries. It is caused by certain species of the bacterium Bordetella—usually B. pertussis, but some cases are caused by B. parapertussis. more...

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The disease was recognizably described as early as 1578 by Guillaume de Baillou (1538-1616), but earlier reports date back at least to the 12th century. B. pertussis was isolated in pure culture in 1906 by Jules Bordet and Octave Gengou. The complete B. pertussis genome of 4,086,186 base pairs was sequenced in 2002.

Characterization

The disease is characterized initially by mild respiratory infection symptoms such as cough, sneezing, and runny nose. After one to two weeks the cough changes character, with paroxysms of coughing followed by an inspiratory "whooping" sound. Coughing fits may be followed by vomiting not necessarily due to nausea but due to the sheer violence of the fit itself, which in severe cases leads to malnutrition. The fits, that do occur on their own, can also be triggered by yawning, stretching, laughing, or yelling. Coughing fits gradually diminish over one to two months. Other complications of the disease include pneumonia, encephalitis, pulmonary hypertension, and secondary bacterial superinfection.

Transmission

The disease is spread by contact with airborne discharges from the mucous membranes of infected people. Laboratory diagnosis include; Calcium alginate throat swab, culture on Bordet-Gengou medium, immunofluorescence and serological methods. Treatment of the disease with antibiotics (often erythromycin, azithromycin, clarithromycin or trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole) results in the person becoming less infectious but probably does not significantly alter the outcome of the disease. Close contacts who receive appropriate antibiotics, "chemoprophylaxis", during the 7–21 day incubation period may be protected from developing symptomatic disease.

Vaccines

Pertussis vaccines were initially formulated in 1926—most notable by Dr. Louis W. Sauer of Northwestern University and Evanston Hospital—as whole-cell preparations, but are now available as acellular preparations, which cause fewer side effects. They offer protection for only a few years, and are given so that immunity lasts through childhood, the time of greatest exposure and greatest risk. The immunizations are often given in combination with tetanus and diphtheria immunizations, at ages 2, 4, and 6 months, and later at 15–18 months and 4–6 years. Traditionally, pertussis vaccines are not given after age seven, as the frequency of side effects associated with the immunization tends to increase with age. The most serious side-effects of immunization are neurological: they include seizures and hypotonic episodes. An acellular vaccine preparation for older individuals is available in Canada and Europe, and two such products are being evaluated for their safety in adolescents and adults in the United States; a Food and Drug Administration decision was approved for use of the vaccine for 11-64 year olds in August 2005.

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Whooping Cough — Still Around
From Pediatrics for Parents, 4/1/99

Many of the once common serious childhood diseases have almost disappeared. Immunization programs for babies and children are responsible for this. Many doctors have never seen a child with mumps or measles. However, these childhood diseases are not gone. Whooping cough, medically called pertussis, is one that still is with us -- and the number of people with it is increasing.

From 1993 to 1996, the number of cases increased from 6,586 to 7,796, a 15% rise. There was a 4% increase for children under one year old and a decrease of 4% for children 1 to 4 years old. The big increase was in older children: 40% for 5 to 9 year olds, 106% for 10 to 19 year olds, and 93% for those 20 years old and older.

According to Dalya Guris, M.D., of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, "Although whooping cough is mild in adolescents and adults, it can cause serious complications in .younger children ... Therefore, early recognition and treatment, along with timely vaccinations of infants, are important."

The low incidence in younger children is probably due to a high level of vaccinations in this age group. In 1996, 95% of two-year-olds in America had received at least three doses of pertussis vaccine. Immunity is lost 5 to 10 years after the last dose of vaccine. The vaccine isn't licensed for anyone over 6 years old.

Modern Medicine, 1/98, p. 27.

COPYRIGHT 1999 Pediatrics for Parents, Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group

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