Publication | Closed Access
Nonclassic measles infections in an immune population exposed to measles during a college bus trip
69
Citations
15
References
1998
Year
VaccinationClassic Measles SymptomsAsymptomatic Measles InfectionsImmune PopulationHealthcare-associated InfectionNonclassic Measles InfectionsDiagnosisMeasles CasesSerologic TestingCollege Bus TripDisease TransmissionInfection ControlPublic HealthMedicineEpidemiology
This study investigated the frequency of mild or asymptomatic measles infections among 44 persons exposed to a student with measles during a 3-day bus trip using two buses. Questionnaires and serum samples were obtained 26-37 days after the trip. All participants had detectable measles-neutralizing antibodies, and none developed classic measles symptoms. Ten persons (23%) were IgM positive for measles, indicating recent infection. Among previously vaccinated IgM-negative persons, those who rode on bus A with the index case-patient had significantly higher microneutralization titers than those on bus B (P= .001), suggesting that some persons on bus A were infected but were IgM negative at the time of the study. Mild or asymptomatic measles infections are probably very common among measles-immune persons exposed to measles cases and may be the most common manifestation of measles during outbreaks in highly immune populations.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1