| Literature DB >> 24898017 |
Omer Adam, Ahmed K M Ali, Judith M Hübschen, Claude P Muller1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Epidemiological data about congenital rubella syndrome (CRS) are scarce and rubella vaccine is not yet included in the childhood immunization schedule in Sudan. This study aimed to identify and describe CRS cases among Sudanese infants with congenital eye or heart defects.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24898017 PMCID: PMC4059485 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-14-305
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
WHO case definitions for congenital rubella syndrome (CRS) and congenital rubella infection (CRI) *
| Any infant less than one year of age in whom a health worker suspects CRS. A health worker should suspect CRS when the infant presents with heart disease, and/or suspicion of deafness, and/or one or more of the following eye signs: white pupil (cataract); diminished vision; pendular movement of the eyes (nystagmus); squint; smaller eye ball (micropthalmos); larger eye ball (congenital glaucoma). A health worker should suspect CRS where there is a maternal history of suspected or confirmed rubella during pregnancy. | |
| A clinically-confirmed case is one in which a qualified physician detects two of the complications in section (a) OR one from group (a) and one from group (b): | |
| (a) Cataract(s) and/or congenital glaucoma; congenital heart disease; loss of hearing; pigmentary retinopathy. | |
| (b) Purpura; splenomegaly; microcephaly; mental retardation; meningoencephalitis; radiolucent bone disease; jaundice with onset within 24 hours after birth. | |
| A laboratory-confirmed CRS case is an infant with a positive blood test for rubella IgM who has clinically-confirmed CRS. | |
| An infant with a positive blood test for rubella IgM who does not have clinically-confirmed CRS is classified as having congenital rubella infection (CRI). |
*Source: WHO (1999) [13].
Characteristics, clinical signs, case classifications and rubella antibodies among seven confirmed or potential CRS cases
| Case 1 | 3 | Glaucoma | Congenital rubella infection | NT | No | ||
| Case 2 | 9 | Cataract, pigmentary retinopathy, microphthalmia | Laboratory-confirmed CRS | No | |||
| Case 3 | 6 | Cataract, CHD (VSD), splenomegaly, jaundice | Clinically-confirmed CRS# | Yes | |||
| Case 4 | 6 | Glaucoma, CHD (PDA, ASD) | Clinically-confirmed CRS# | ± | No | ||
| Case 5 | 6 | Pigmentary retinopathy | Suspected CRS# | No | |||
| Case 6 | 6 | Cataract | Suspected CRS# | No | |||
| Case 7 | 12 | Micropthalmia, purpura | Suspected CRS# | No |
ASD = atreial septal defect; CHD = congenital heart disease; NT = Not Tested; PDA = Patent ductus arteriosus; VSD = Ventricular septal defect; # = potential CRS case.