• Adv Respir Med · Jan 2019

    Case Reports

    Measles pneumonitis.

    • Pinelopi Schoini, Theodoros Karampitsakos, Maria Avdikou, Aggeliki Athanasopoulou, Georgios Tsoukalas, and Argyrios Tzouvelekis.
    • 4th Department of Pneumonology, General Hospital for Thoracic Diseases "SOTIRIA", Athens, Greece, Athens, Greece.
    • Adv Respir Med. 2019 Jan 1; 87 (1): 63-67.

    AbstractMeasles is an acute febrile illness, potentially fatal and highly contagious, which is transmitted through the respiratory mode. Fever combined with one of the following: cough, coryza, conjunctivitis are the first manifestations of the disease. Koplik's spots may also appear on the buccal mucosa providing an opportunity to set the diagnosis even before the emergence of rash. Rash typically appears 3-4 days after the onset of fever, initially on the face and behind the ears, and its appearance is associated with the peak of the symptoms. Measles affects multiple systems, including the respiratory system, with pneumonia being one of the most lethal complications. Management involves best supportive care, correction of dehydration and nutritional deficiencies, treatment of secondary bacterial infections and provision of vitamin A. Importantly, given that measles present with lifelong immunity following infection or vaccination, prevention through measles vaccination has a cardinal role for measles' elimination. Indeed, public education and vaccination led to an estimated 79% decrease in global measles deaths from 2000 to 2015. Nonetheless, the last two years have seen a measles outbreak in several countries, partially due to the anti-vaccination movement. This article aims to present two cases of measles in our hospital and highlight the pressing need for vaccination in order to eradicate a potentially fatal disease.

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