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• @ Identification: 
• *A viral infection, polio virus(genus: Enterovirus) types 

1,2,3 . all types can cause paralysis.  

• *Type 1 often isolated from paralytic cases, type 3 less so, 

& type 2 least . *commonly,Type 1 most frequently causes 

epidemics. Most vaccine associated cases are due to type 2 

or 3.  

• *One in 200 infections leads to irreversible paralysis 

(usually in the legs). Among those paralysed, 5% to 10% die 

when their breathing muscles become immobilized.  

• *Poliomyelitis most often recognized by acute onset of 

flaccid paralysis, polio virus occur in the GI tract spread to 

the regional nodes, & in minority of cases to the nervous 

system. 
 


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• *Symptoms include : 
• fever, malaise, headache, nausea & vomiting. 

If the disease progresses to major illness, 
severe muscle pain & stiffness of the neck & 
back with flaccid paralysis may occur.  

• *Flaccid paralysis occur in less than 1% of 

polio virus infection, greater than 90% of 
infections are either in apparent or a non-
specific fever, Aseptic meningitis occurs in 
about 1% of cases.
 


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• *The paralysis of poliomyelitis  
• is asymptomatic with fever present at onset. 
• The maximum extent of paralysis is reached 

within 3-4 days, the site of paralysis depends on 
location of nerve cell destruction in spinal cord 
or brain stem.
 

•  The legs are affected more often than the arms. 

Paralysis of the muscles of respiration &/or 
swallowing is life threatening .
 
 


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• *Any paralysis present after  
• 60 days is likely to be permanent.  
• *Polio remains primarly a disease of infants & 

young childrens, 70-80 % of cases are less than 3 

year of age & 80-90 % of cases are less than 5 

years of age. 

• *WHO has set the end of the year 2000 as the 

target for world wide eradication but it still have 

little longer to accomplish. 


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• @Occurrence:World wide, it occur 

sporadically or epidemic the greatest risk of 
polio occurs in India & to lesser extent in 
west & central Africa. with increase in cases 
during the late summer & autumn in 
temperate countries & in hot , rainy seasons 
in tropical countries.
 


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• @Reservoir: Humans, the virus dose not 

survive long in environment outside the 
human body. There is no long term carriers 
state.
 

 


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• @Mode of tranismission: 
• 1- person to person by feco-oral route & 

pharangeal spread . 

• 2- milk, food-staffs, & other material 

contaminated with feces have been 
incremented as vehicles (rare).
 

 


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• @ Incubation period: 7-14 days for paralytic patients. 
• @Period of communicability: 
• As long as the virus is excreted. Poloi virus is 

demonstrable in throat secretion as early as 36 hr & 
in feces 72 hr after exposure to infection in both 
clinical & unapparent cases. Virus typically persist in 
the throat about 1 week & in the feces for 3-6 weeks 
or longer. 
 

• Cases are most infectious during the first few days 

before & after onset of the symptoms. 


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• @Susceptibility & Resistance: 
• Susceptibility to infection is universal but paralysis occur 

in 1%. The rate of paralysis among infected, non-immune 

adult is higher than that among non –immunized infants 

& young children.  

• The specific immunity is life long duration follows both 

clinically & unapparent infection . seconds attacks are 

rare & results from infection with a polio virus of a 

different type. Infant born to immune mothers have 

transient passive immunity . 

• IM injection, trauma or surgery during incubation period 

or prodromal illness may provoke paralysis in the affected 

extremity. 


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• @Methods of control: 
• A- preventive measures: 
• 1- educate the public on the advantages of 

immunization in early childhood. 

• 2- polio vaccines: there are two types of polio 

vaccine: 

• * trivalent oral polio vaccine & *inactivated or 

killed polio vaccine. 

 


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• Trivalent oral polio vaccine: 
• Consist of life attenuated polio viruses & is a safe 

& effective vaccine. OPV stimulates natural 

infection by inducing both circulating antiboby & 

intestinal resistence. As aresult , children 

immunize with OPV are unlikely to spread wild 

polio virus to other children. When administered 

during a mass campaign, OPV can interrubed 

wiled polio virus tranismissin in the community. 

These compaign are ideally conducted during the 

cool, dry sessons to achieve maximam effect.  
 


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• WHO recommends the use of OPV alone for 

immunization programs in developing countries 

because of low cost, ease to adminsteration & 

superior capacity to provide population immunity . 

OPV  is given in four doses at 0, 2, 4, 6. with 1

st

 

booster dose at 18 month & 2

nd

 booster dose at 4-6 

year. 

• The three doses of OPV will protect at least 80-85% 

of immunized children from paralytic disease. 

Lower levels of immunity, specially for type 3, may 

occur in developing countries.  


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Disadvantages

  

• Vaccine-associated paralytic polio — A rare, but 

important adverse event associated with OPV 
administration is vaccine-associated paralytic 
poliomyelitis VAPP.
 

• VAPP occurs among OPV recipients who are mostly 

young infants and also among direct contacts of 
OPV recipients, mostly inadequately vaccinated 
adult caretakers. The overall risk is about 1 case per 
900,000 first dose OPV recipients 
 


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• .  
• Subsequent doses  
• are less likely to be associated with VAPP. Adults 

may be at higher risk than young infants and 
children  . Persons with B cell immunodeficiency 
carry the highest risk with an estimated VAPP 
rate of 2 per 1000 vaccinees  . For this reason, 
OPV is contraindicated for persons who are 
immunodeficient
 


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Contraindication to OPV

:  

• congenital immune deficiency , current 

immunosuppressive therapy, disease state 
associated with immunosuppression (HIV, 
lymphoma, leukemia, generalized malignancy), 
& the presence of immunodeficient individuals 
in household of potential vaccine recipients 
(IPV should be used in such people).
 

 


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• Inactivated or killed polio vaccine:  
• It produce sufficient circulating  
• antibody that blocks spreads of the virus to the 

CNS.  

• IPV have no risk of vaccine associated paralysis. It 

produce lower levels of intestinal immunity 

compared to OPV so person immunized with IPV is 

more likely to spread wiled polio virus to other 

children compared to OPV.  

• IPV is more expensive, must be injected by trained 

personals, & required additional equipments & 

supplies. 
 


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• B- control of patient , contacts & immediate 

environment: 

• 1- obligatory case report to local health authority of 

paralytic cases. In countries undertaking polio 
eradication, each case of acute flaccid paralysis(AFP) , 
including guillain-barre syndrome , in children less than 
15 year of age, or with paralytic illness at any age where 
polio is suspected , should be reported immediatly , 
investigated withen 48 hours and two stool specimens 
collected 24-48 hours apart and within 14 days of 
paralysis onset. 

•  Non-paralytic cases are also reported to the local health 

authority. . 
 
 


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• 2- isolation: enteric precaution. 
• 3- concurrent disinfection: throat discharge, 

feces & articles soiled therewith, adequate 
sewage disposal system, terminal cleaning.
 

• 4- Quarantine: none. 
• 5- protection of contact : immunization of 

familial & other close contact is 
recommended.
 
 


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• 6- investigations of contact  
• & source of infection: occurrence of a single 

paralytic case in community should prompt 
immediate investigations. Through search for 
additional cases of AFP in the area around the case 
assures early detection, facilitate control & permits 
treatment of unrecognized & unreported cases.
 

• 7- specific treatment : none, special treatment as 

respirotery assistance, physical therapy may be 
needed. 
 

 


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• C- epidemic measures: in countries 

undertaking polio eradication, a single case 
of poliomyelitis is considered a public health 
emergency & public health authorities will 
determine the need for supplemental 
immunization program in the community. 
 

•  

 

 


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THE GLOBAL POLIO ERADICATION INITIATIVE

 

 

• Objectives 
• The objectives of the Global Polio Eradication 

Initiative are: 

• To interrupt transmission of the wild poliovirus 

as soon as possible;  

• To achieve certification of global polio 

eradication;  

• To contribute to health systems development 

and strengthening routine immunization and 

surveillance for communicable diseases in a 

systematic way.  

 


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Strategies  

 

 

• 1- High infant immunization coverage with four doses of 

oral 

polio vaccine

 (OPV) in the first year of life in 

developing and endemic countries, and routine 

immunization with OPV and/or IPV elsewhere.  

• 2- Organization of “National immunization days” to 

provide supplementary doses of oral polio vaccine to all 

children less than five years of age.  

• 3- Active surveillance for wild poliovirus through reporting 

and laboratory testing of all cases of acute flaccid paralysis 

among children less than 15 years of age.  

• 4- Targeted "mop-up" campaigns once wild poliovirus 

transmission is limited to a specific focal area.  

 


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• Before region can be  
• certified polio-free, three conditions must be satisfied: (a) 

there are at least three years of zero polio cases due to 

wild poliovirus; (b) disease surveillance efforts in 

countries meet international standards; and (c) each 

country must illustrate the capacity to detect, report and 

respond to “imported” polio case . 

• As indicator of a countrys ability to detect polio , at least 

one cases of AFP per 100000 chilidren < 15 years of age  

should be detected. The AFP rate in children < 15 years of 

age is an indicator of the sensitivity of the surveillance 

system .   

 


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eradciation

Impact of global polio 

:

 

programe

 

• 1-More than five million people who would 

otherwise have been paralysed are today walking 

• 2- it  help to reduce poverty 
• 3-it  access to children everywhere,  it“finding” 

children in remote villages and households for the 

first time, and "mapping" their location for future 

health services. 

• 4- building effective disease-reporting and 

surveillance systems 

• 5- it  highly successful measles vaccination 

campaigns that have saved millions of young lives , 

since it give with polio vaccine. 
 

     
 
 

  


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• 6-Vitamin A is often administered during 

polio vaccine. Since 1988, more than 1.2 
million childhood deaths have been 
prevented through provision of vitamin A 
with polio vaccine. 
 

• 7-It give a model for regional and 

international cooperation for health & have 
significant financial benefits will also accrue 
from eradication.
 
 




رفعت المحاضرة من قبل: Ahmed monther Aljial
المشاهدات: لقد قام عضوان و 104 زائراً بقراءة هذه المحاضرة








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