| Literature DB >> 27625709 |
Kristi L Koenig1, Siri Shastry2, Bandr Mzahim3, Abdulmajeed Almadhyan4, Michael J Burns5.
Abstract
Mumps is a highly contagious viral infection that became rare in most industrialized countries following the introduction of measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine in 1967. The disease, however, has been re-emerging with several outbreaks over the past decade. Many clinicians have never seen a case of mumps. To assist frontline healthcare providers with detecting potential cases and initiating critical actions, investigators modified the "Identify-Isolate-Inform" tool for mumps infection. The tool is applicable to regions with rare incidences or local outbreaks, especially seen in college students, as well as globally in areas where vaccination is less common. Mumps begins with a prodrome of low-grade fever, myalgias and malaise/anorexia, followed by development of nonsuppurative parotitis, which is the pathognomonic finding associated with acute mumps infection. Orchitis and meningitis are the two most common serious complications, with hearing loss and infertility occurring rarely. Providers should consider mumps in patients with exposure to a known case or international travel to endemic regions who present with consistent signs and symptoms. If mumps is suspected, healthcare providers must immediately implement standard and droplet precautions and notify the local health department and hospital infection control personnel.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27625709 PMCID: PMC5017829 DOI: 10.5811/westjem.2016.6.30793
Source DB: PubMed Journal: West J Emerg Med ISSN: 1936-900X
Figure 1Child with mumps parotitis, the pathognomonic finding of acute mumps infection.
Complications associated with mumps infection.
| Complication | Frequency |
|---|---|
| Orchitis | 15–40% of postpubertal males with infection |
| Epididymitis | Accompanies up to 85% of cases of orchitis |
| Bilateral orchitis | 15–30% of epididymitis or orchitis cases |
| Subfertility | Up to 13% of male patients |
| Testicular atrophy | 30–50% of patients with orchitis |
| Testicular tumors | 0.5% of cases of mumps orchitis or testicular atrophy |
| Oophoritis | 5% of postpubertal females with infection |
| Meningitis | 1–10% of infections |
| Encephalitis | 0.1% of infections |
| Death due to CNS complications of mumps | 1 to 1.5% of cases with CNS complications |
| Permanent unilateral hearing loss | 0.005% of infections |
| Spontaneous abortion | 27% of pregnancies with mumps infection in the first trimester |
| Pancreatitis | 4% of infections |
CNS, central nervous system
Figure 2Identify-Isolate-Inform Tool adapted for mumps virus.