Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

poliomyelitis

Redirected from "Polio"

Did you mean: poliomyelitis (disease, virus), polio, polio– (gray matter)

 
 

Definition

Poliomyelitis, also called polio or infantile paralysis, is a highly infectious viral disease that may attack the central nervous system and is characterized by symptoms that range from a mild nonparalytic infection to total paralysis in a matter of hours.

Description

There are three known types of polioviruses (called 1,2, and 3), each causing a different strain of the disease and all are members of the viral family of enteroviruses (viruses that infect the gastrointestinal tract). Type 1 is the cause of epidemics and many cases of paralysis, which is the most severe manifestation of the infection. The virus is usually a harmless parasite of human beings. Some statistics quote one in 200 infections as leading to paralysis while others state that one in 1,000 cases reach the central nervous system (CNS). When it does reach the CNS, inflammation and destruction of the spinal cord motor cells (anterior horn cells) occurs, which prevents them from sending out impulses to muscles. This causes the muscles to become limp or soft and they cannot contract. This is referred to as flaccid paralysis and is the type found in polio. The extent of the paralysis depends on where the virus strikes and the number of cells that it destroys. Usually, some of the limb muscles are paralyzed; the abdominal muscles or muscles of the back may be paralyzed, affecting posture. The neck muscles may become too weak for the head to be lifted. Paralysis of the face muscles may cause the mouth to twist or the eyelids to droop. Life may be threatened if paralysis of the throat or of the breathing muscles occurs.

Man is the only natural host for polioviruses and it most commonly infects younger children, although older children and adults can be infected. Crowded living conditions and poor hygiene encourage the spread of poliovirus. Risk factors for this paralytic illness include older age, pregnancy, abnormalities of the immune system, recent tonsillectomy, and a recent episode of excessively strenuous exercise concurrent with the onset of the CNS phase.

— Linda K. Bennington, CNS



Search unanswered questions...
Enter a word or phrase...
All Community Q&A Reference topics
 
Dictionary: po·li·o·my·e·li·tis   ('lē-ō-mī'ə-lī'tĭs) pronunciation
Top
n.

A highly infectious viral disease that chiefly affects children and, in its acute forms, causes inflammation of motor neurons of the spinal cord and brainstem, leading to paralysis, muscular atrophy, and often deformity. Through vaccination, the disease is preventable. Also called infantile paralysis.

[New Latin : Greek polios, gray + MYELITIS.]

poliomyelitic po'li·o·my'e·lit'ic (-lĭt'ĭk) adj.
 
Neurological Disorder:

Poliomyelitis

Top

Definition

Poliomyelitis is an infectious disease that is caused by a subgroup of viruses. The hallmark of the disease is the rapid development of paralysis. Poliomyelitis is also commonly called polio. Once a cause of widespread public health measures to control epidemics, polio is now on the brink of eradication.

Description

The term poliomyelitis comes from the Greek words polio, meaning gray, and myelon, referring to the spinal cord. The term is accurate, as an important consequence of the disease is the involvement of the spinal cord with resulting paralysis.

Poliomyelitis was first described in 1789, although it likely dates back many centuries prior to that time. Outbreaks occurred in Europe and the United States beginning in the early nineteenth century. For the next hundred years, outbreaks became a regular summer and fall event in northern regions. As time passed, the number of cases and people crippled by the infection rose. By 1952, more than 21,000 people in the United States were paralyzed after a bout of poliomyelitis.

The manufacture and widespread use of several vaccines beginning in the 1950s drastically reduced the number of cases of poliomyelitis. In the United States, the last reported case of polio acquired from a wild-type (original form of a naturally occurring) virus was in 1979.

Demographics

Humans are the only known carriers of the polio virus. Poliomyelitis most commonly affects children under the age of five. Several generations ago, the disease was much more common than it is now. Even in the 1950s, poliomyelitis was global in its occurrence. Many children in underdeveloped and developed countries, including the United States, were susceptible. With the successful development of vaccines and the implementation of global vaccination campaigns, the infection has been drastically reduced. As of 2004, only isolated pockets of disease remain. These hot spots include areas in Africa, India, and the eastern Mediterranean.

Males and females are equally susceptible to polio. Irreversible paralysis, usually in the legs, occurs in about one of every 200 polio infections.

Causes and symptoms

Poliomyelitis originates with a viral infection. Poliovirus is a member of a group of viruses designated as enteroviruses. The viruses contain ribonucleic acid (RNA) as their genetic material. More specifically, the various polioviruses belong in a group (or family) called Picornaviridae.

There are three types of poliovirus that are related to each other based on their recognition by the body's immune system. This sort of a relationship is called a serotype. The three poliovirus serotypes are P1, P2, and P3. Even though they are closely related immunologically, developing immunity to one serotype is no guarantee of protection from infection from the other two serotypes. Thus, vaccines are geared towards producing an immune response that will be protective against all three serotypes.

Enteroviruses can be found in the gastrointestinal tract and are not often dissolved by the acidic conditions. Thus, poliovirus can be swallowed and remain intact, capable of causing an infection. As the virus particles lodge at the back of the throat in the pharynx, or are swallowed and end up in the intestinal tract, the viruses can begin to multiply. Like all viruses, the multiplication requires a host cell, in this case, cells lining the throat and intestines.

Shortly after the virus enters a person, viral particles can be recovered from the throat and from feces. About one week later, the virus is not usually detectable in the throat. However, virus can continue to be excreted in the feces for several more weeks. During this time, symptoms of the disease do not develop. Thus, the virus can be unknowingly passed to others via the oral or fecal-to-oral route. This transmission is a common method of transfer of a variety of viral and bacterial infections in settings like daycare centers.

Subsequently, the poliovirus invades lymph tissue. From there, the virus can enter the bloodstream and infect cells of the central nervous system. This typically takes from six to 20 days after infection. Multiplication of the virus inside motor neurons in environments like the brain destroys the host cells and causes paralysis. The appearance of paralysis is rapid.

Up to 95% of polio infections do not produce any symptoms or damage. However, these individuals can still excrete the virus in their feces, and so are capable of infecting others. For every 200 people who escape the effects of poliomyelitis, about one person becomes paralyzed.

Approximately 4–8% of polio infections are minor, and consist of fairly nonspecific symptoms, including sore throat and fever, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, or constipation. Recovery is complete in about a week. Indeed, a person may not know the difference between this brush with polio and the flu. This condition is known as abortive poliomyelitis. There is no involvement of the central nervous system.

In 1–2% of infections, a condition called nonparalytic aseptic meningitis is produced. Nonspecific symptoms characterize this condition, followed several days later by stiffness in the neck, back, and/or legs. The symptoms last from 2–10 days. Recovery is complete.

Less than 1% of those who are infected with the poliovirus develop what is termed flaccid paralysis. Paralysis appears anywhere from one to 10 days after symptoms that include loss of reflexes, severe muscle aches, and muscle spasms in the arms, legs, or back. In children, the initial symptoms can begin to fade before paralysis appears.

Over the next few days, the paralysis becomes worse. For many people, muscle strength eventually returns. However, for those who still have weak muscles and/or paralysis a year later, the changes are likely permanent.

Types of paralytic poliomyelitis

There are three types of paralysis that can develop in poliomyelitis. The first is called spinal polio. This is the most common form of polio-related paralysis, and accounted for nearly 80% of all polio-related paralysis from 1969 to 1979. This type produces the classical image of a person whose legs have been paralyzed. The second type is known as bulbar polio. This type accounts for about 2% of known cases. Stiffness and paralysis typically occurs in the neck and head. The third type of polio-related paralysis is called bulbospinal polio. A combination of the previous two conditions, it accounts for nearly 20% of paralysis.

Postpolio syndrome

In almost half of those who contract polio in childhood, muscle pain and weakness reappears three or four decades later. Postpolio syndrome does not appear to be caused by a recurrence of the viral infection, as no virus can be detected in the feces. Rather, it may result from motor neurons damaged in the initial bout of polio that fail to operate properly decades later. The reason for the failure is not known.

Diagnosis

The diagnosis of poliomyelitis is based on the recovery of the virus from the throat or feces of a person. It is possible to isolate the virus from the cerebrospinal fluid, but this is uncommon. When the virus is recovered, specialized testing can be done to determine if the virus is wild type (that is, it has been acquired from the environment), or whether it is a vaccine type (polio vaccines utilize intact, but weakened viruses).

Another means of diagnosis relies on the detection of antibodies that have been produced by the virus. Since antibodies are produced as a part of the vaccination process, physicians focus on the increasing levels of antibodies over a short time as evidence that the body is battling an active viral infection.

Still another diagnostic test detects increased number of white blood cells and protein in the cerebrospinal fluid. This is a more general response to infections. Other conditions can present similar symptoms, and need to be ruled out when diagnosing poliomyelitis. These include Guillain-Barré syndrome, meningitis, and encephalitis.

Treatment team

The treatment team ideally consists of the family physician, neurologist, infectious disease specialist, physical therapists, occupational therapists, specialty nurses, and family members. In field conditions in developing countries, the treatment team may consist of a physician and direct caregivers only. World health agencies rapidly mobilize to provide care and vaccinations in order to contain isolated outbreaks in developing countries.

Treatment

Prevention is the watchword for poliomyelitis, and prevention consists of vaccination. There are two polio vaccines available; inactivated (Salk) poliovirus vaccine, and oral poliovirus vaccine.

The inactivated vaccine was devised by American physician Jonas Salk (1914–1995) in the 1950s. The vaccine contains all three serotypes of the poliovirus. The viruses, which are inactivated and incapable of causing an infection, are grown in a type of monkey kidney cell. When injected, the viruses stimulate an immune response that is protective. Initially, vaccine impurity was the cause of illness and death in some people who received the Salk vaccine. Refinement of the vaccine preparation eliminated these unwanted effects. Still, in the 1990s, a controversy arose regarding the vaccine as a suggested source of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), based on the known presence of the AIDS virus in monkey tissue cells. However, scrupulously conducted examinations ruled out this suggestion.

The oral vaccine was developed by Polish-born American physician Albert Sabin (1906–1993) in the late 1950s and was licensed for use in 1963. This vaccine has largely replaced the injected Salk vaccine. The vaccine also contains live, but weakened (attenuated) poliovirus.

A series of vaccinations given at two, four, six to 18 months, and four to six years produces a lifelong immunity to the three poliovirus serotypes. In regions where poliomyelitis is actively occurring, even a single dose of vaccine can provide adequate protection from infection during the outbreak.

In 2002, a new formulation of polio vaccine was approved for use in the United States. In addition to the polioviruses, the vaccine also bestows immunity to the virus that causes hepatitis B.

Recovery and rehabilitation

There is no cure for poliomyelitis. Some people can partially recover from paralysis, while the condition is irreversible in others. Physical and occupational therapies can be helpful in providing strengthening exercises and assistive devices for walking, but these are seldom available in remote areas of developing countries where polio outbreaks still occur.

Prognosis

Among those who are paralyzed by the viral infection, 5–10% overall die due to the paralysis of muscles used for breathing. For every 100 people who become paralyzed by the viral infection, two to five children and 15–30% of adults will die from polio.

Special concerns

Vaccination can produce reactions ranging from a transient and minor skin irritation and allergic reaction to some components of the oral vaccine to paralysis. The latter, termed vaccine-associated paralytic polio, is very rare. The condition is associated more with the injectable vaccine than with the vaccine given orally. Nonetheless, adults can be affected. From 1980–1998, 152 adults in the United States developed some degree of paralysis from polio vaccination.

The decision by Nigeria to suspend its vaccination program in 2001 contributed to a rise in the number of polio cases in the African country. Nigeria has since reinstated the vaccination program. The Nigerian experience points out that continued vigilance is necessary to keep poliomyelitis under control.

Since the widespread availability of vaccines, the number of cases of poliomyelitis worldwide has decreased by over 99% since 1988. That year, the estimated number of cases was more than 350,000. As of April 2003, the number of cases was reduced to 1,919. The dramatic reduction in the disease is attributed to a multinational worldwide vaccination effort that began in 1988. The program was spearheaded by organizations such as the World Health Organization.

The effort intensified during the first half of 2004, with the urgent distribution of polio vaccine to 250 million children in the world's remaining hotspots. As of April 2004, the number of polio cases worldwide caused by a wild-type virus was reduced to 89. World health officials aim to interrupt the transmission of all wild-type polio virus by the year 2005.

Resources

BOOKS

Bruno, Richard L. The Polio Paradox: Understanding and Treating "Post-Polio Syndrome" and Chronic Fatigue. New York: Warner Books, 2003.

Oshinsky, David, Polio: An American Story. New York: Oxford University Press, 2004.

Salgado, Sebastio, and Kofi Annan. The End of Polio: A Global Effort to End a Disease. Boston: Bulfinch, 2003.

PERIODICALS

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "Progress toward global eradication of poliomyelitis." Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (July 2003): 366–369.

OTHER

Dowdle, Walter, et al. "Preventing Polio from Becoming a Reemerging Disease." Panel Summary from the 2000 Emerging Infectious Diseases Conference in Atlanta, Georgia. CDC. April 23, 2004 (June 2, 2004). http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/eid/vol7no3_supp/dowdle.htm.

World Health Organization. "Poliomyelitis." April 14, 2004 (June 2, 2004). http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs114/en/.

ORGANIZATIONS

World Health Organization. Avenue Appia 20, Geneva, Switzerland. + 41 22 791 2111; Fax: + 41 22 791 3111. info@who.int. http://www.who.int.


Brian Douglas Hoyle, PhD


 
Sci-Tech Encyclopedia: Poliomyelitis
Top

An acute infectious viral disease which in its serious form affects the central nervous system and, by destruction of motor neurons in the spinal cord, produces flaccid paralysis. However, about 99% of infections are either inapparent or very mild. See also Animal virus; Central nervous system.

The virus probably enters the body through the mouth; primary multiplication occurs in the throat and intestine. Transitory viremia occurs; the blood seems to be the most likely route to the central nervous system. The severity of the infection may range from a completely inapparent through minor influenzalike illness, or an aseptic meningitis syndrome (nonparalytic poliomyelitis) with stiff and painful back and neck, to the severe forms of paralytic and bulbar poliomyelitis. In all clinical types, virus is regularly present in the enteric tract. In paralytic poliomyelitis the usual course begins as a minor illness but progresses, sometimes with an intervening recession of symptoms (hence biphasic), to flaccid paralysis of varying degree and persistence. When the motor neurons affected are those of the diaphragm or of the intercostal muscles, respiratory paralysis occurs. Bulbar poliomyelitis results from viral attack on the medulla (bulb of the brain) or higher brain centers, with respiratory, vasomotor, facial, palatal, or pharyngeal disturbances.

Poliomyelitis occurs throughout the world. In temperate zones it appears chiefly in summer and fall, although winter outbreaks have been known. It occurs in all age groups, but less frequently in adults because of their acquired immunity. The virus is spread by human contact; the nature of the contact is not clear, but it appears to be associated with familial contact and with interfamily contact among young children. The virus may be present in flies.

Inactivated poliovirus vaccine (Salk; IPV), prepared from virus grown in monkey kidney cultures, was developed and first used in the United States, but oral poliovirus vaccine (Sabin; OPV) is now generally used throughout the world. The oral vaccine is a living, attenuated virus.


 
Dental Dictionary: poliomyelitis
Top
(pō′lē-ō-mī′ ə-lī′tis)
n

A disease produced by a small viral organism that enters the body via the alimentary tract and produces upper pharyngeal, pharyngeal, and intestinal inflammation in its mentor form. In the more severe variety, a subsequent viremia is produced, with extension of the infection to the anterior pulp horn cells and ganglia of the spinal cord, producing a flaccid paralysis. In bulbar poliomyelitis the viral infection involves the medulla, resulting in impairment of swallowing, respiration, and circulation. It is now recognized that three types of viruses are responsible for the nonparalytic, paralytic, and bulbar varieties of poliomyelitis. Excellent immunization procedures have been provided by use of killed viruses (Salk) and attenuated mutant vaccines (Sabin).

 

Definition

Poliomyelitis, also called polio or infantile paralysis, is a highly infectious viral disease that may attack the central nervous system and is characterized by symptoms that range from a mild nonparalytic infection to total paralysis in a matter of hours.

Description

There are three known types of polioviruses (called 1, 2, and 3), each causing a different strain of the disease and all being members of the viral family of enteroviruses (viruses that infect the gastrointestinal tract). Type 1 is the cause of epidemics, and many cases of paralysis, which is the most severe manifestation of the infection. The virus is usually a harmless parasite of human beings. Some statistics quote one in 200 infections as leading to paralysis, while others state that one in 1,000 cases reach the central nervous system (CNS). When it does reach the CNS, inflammation and destruction of the spinal cord motor cells (anterior horn cells) occurs, which prevents them from sending out impulses to muscles. This causes the muscles to become limp or soft, and they cannot contract, a condition called flaccid paralysis and is the type found in polio. The extent of the paralysis depends on where the virus strikes and the number of cells that it destroys. Usually, some of the limb muscles are paralyzed; the abdominal muscles or muscles of the back may be paralyzed, affecting posture. The neck muscles may become too weak for the head to be lifted. Paralysis of the face muscles may cause the mouth to twist or the eyelids to droop. Life may be threatened if paralysis of the throat or of the breathing muscles occurs.

Humans are the only natural host for polioviruses, and it most commonly infects younger children, although older children and adults can be infected. Crowded living conditions and poor hygiene encourage the spread of poliovirus. Risk factors for this paralytic illness include older age, pregnancy, abnormalities of the immune system, and a recent episode of excessively strenuous exercise concurrent with the onset of the CNS phase. As of 2004, the last naturally occurring polio case in the United States was diagnosed in 1979.

Causes and Symptoms

Poliovirus can be spread by direct exposure to an infected individual, and more rarely, by eating foods contaminated with waste products from the intestines (feces) and/or droplets of moisture (saliva) from an infected person. Thus, the major route of transmission is fecal-oral, which occurs primarily with poor sanitary conditions. The virus is believed to enter the body through the mouth with primary multiplication occurring in the lymphoid tissues in the throat, where it can persist for about one week. During this time, it is absorbed into the blood and lymphatics from the gastrointestinal tract where it can reside and multiply, sometimes for as long as 17 weeks. Once absorbed, it is widely distributed throughout the body until it ultimately reaches the CNS (the brain and spinal cord). The infection is passed on to others when poor hand washing allows the virus to remain on the hands after eating or using the bathroom. Transmission remains possible while the virus is being excreted and it can be transmitted for as long as the virus remains in the throat or feces. The incubation period ranges from three to 21 days, but cases are most infectious from seven to ten days before and after the onset of symptoms.

There are two basic patterns to the virus: the minor illness (abortive type) and the major illness (which may be paralytic or nonparalytic). The minor illness accounts for 80 to 90 percent of clinical infections and is found mostly in young children. It is mild and does not involve the CNS. Symptoms include a slight fever, fatigue, headache, sore throat, and vomiting, which generally develop three to five days after exposure. Recovery from the minor illness occurs within 24 to 72 hours. Symptoms of the major illness usually appear without a previous minor illness and generally affect older children and adults.

About 10 percent of people infected with poliovirus develop severe headache and pain and stiffness of the neck and back. This is due to an inflammation of the meninges (tissues which cover the spinal cord and brain). This syndrome is called aseptic meningitis. The term aseptic is used to differentiate this type of meningitis from those caused by bacteria. The patient usually recovers completely from this illness within several days.

About 1 percent of people infected with poliovirus develop the most severe form. Some of these patients may have two to three symptom-free days between the minor illness and the major illness, but the symptoms often appear without any previous minor illness. Symptoms again include headache and back and neck pain. The major symptoms, however, are due to invasion of the motor nerves, which are responsible for movement of the muscles. This viral invasion causes inflammation and then destruction of these nerves. The muscles, therefore, no longer receive any messages from the brain or spinal cord. The muscles become weak, floppy, and then totally paralyzed. All muscle tone is lost in the affected limb and the muscle becomes soft (flaccid). Within a few days, the muscle begins to decrease in size (atrophy). The affected muscles may be on both sides of the body (symmetric paralysis) but are often on unbalanced parts of the body (asymmetric paralysis). Sensation or the ability to feel is not affected in these paralyzed limbs.

When poliovirus invades the brainstem (the stalk of brain which connects the two cerebral hemispheres with the spinal cord, called bulbar polio), a person may begin to have trouble breathing and swallowing. If the brainstem is severely affected, the brain's control of such vital functions as heart rate and blood pressure may be disturbed, a condition that can lead to death.

The maximum state of paralysis is usually reached within just a few days. The remaining, unaffected nerves then begin the process of attempting to grow branches, which can compensate for the destroyed nerves. Fortunately, the nerve cells are not always completely destroyed. By the end of a month, the nerve impulses start to return to the apparently paralyzed muscle and by the end of six months, recovery is almost complete. If the nerve cells are completely destroyed; however, paralysis is permanent.

Diagnosis

Fever and asymmetric flaccid paralysis without sensory loss in a child or young adult almost always indicate poliomyelitis. Using a long, thin needle inserted into the lower back to withdraw spinal fluid (lumbar puncture) will reveal increased white blood cells and no bacteria (aseptic meningitis). Nonparalytic poliomyelitis cannot be distinguished clinically from aseptic meningitis due to other agents. Virus isolated from a throat swab and/or feces or blood tests demonstrating the rise in a specific antibody is required to confirm the diagnosis.

Treatment

There is no specific treatment for polio except symptomatic. Therapy is designed to make the patient more comfortable (pain medications and hot packs to soothe the muscles), and intervention if the muscles responsible for breathing fail (for instance, a ventilator to take over the work of breathing). During active infection, rest on a firm bed is indicated. Physical therapy is the most important part of management of paralytic polio during recovery.

Prognosis

When poliovirus causes only the minor illness or simple aseptic meningitis, the patient can be expected to recover completely. Among patients with the major illness, about 50 percent recover completely. About 25 percent of such patients have slight disability, and about 25 percent have permanent and serious disability. Approximately 1 percent of all patients with major illness die. The greatest return of muscle function occurs in the first six months, but improvements may continue for two years.

Post-polio syndrome (PPS) is a condition that can strike polio survivors anywhere from 10 to 40 years after their recovery from polio. It is caused by the death of individual nerve terminals in the motor units that remain after the initial polio attack. Symptoms include fatigue, slowly progressive muscle weakness, muscle and joint pain, and muscular atrophy. The severity of PPS depends upon how seriously the survivors were affected by the first polio attack.

Prevention

There are two types of polio immunizations available in the United States, but since the year 2000, one is rarely used. A vaccine takes advantage of the fact that infection with polio leads to an immune reaction, which will give the person permanent, lifelong immunity from reinfection with the form of poliovirus for which the person was vaccinated.

The Salk vaccine (also called the killed polio vaccine or inactivated polio vaccine, IPV) consists of a series of three shots that are given just under the skin to children at the ages of two months, four months, and any time between six and 18 months. A fourth injection is given between the ages of four to six years as a booster. This immunization contains no live virus, just the components of the virus that provoke the recipient's immune system to react as if the recipient were actually infected with the poliovirus. The recipient thus becomes immune to infection with the poliovirus.

Since the year 2000, the Sabin vaccine (also called the oral polio vaccine or OPV) has been discontinued in the United States, although it is still being used in other countries. It contains the live, but weakened, poliovirus and because OPV uses the live virus, it has the potential to cause infection in individuals with weak immune defenses (both in the person who receives the vaccine and in close contacts). Approximately nine cases a year of vaccine related polio was associated with OPV in the United States. Although this is a rare complication, occurring in only one in 6.8 million doses administered and one in every 6.4 million doses from having close contact with someone who received the vaccine, the risk of having polio from OPV was greater than it was of naturally acquiring it.

Following the launching of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative, the number of cases fell 99 percent from an estimated 350,000 cases to less than 3,500 cases worldwide in 2000. At the end of 2000, the number of polio-infected countries was approximately 20, down from 125. The goal of the World Health Organization (WHO) is to have polio eliminated from the planet by the year 2005. The virus has still been identified in Africa and parts of Asia, so travelers to those areas may want to check with their physicians concerning booster vaccinations.

Resources

Books

Oshinsky, David. Polio: An American Story. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2004.

Periodicals

Alexander, L. N., et al. "Vaccine Policy Changes and Epidemiology of Poliomyelitis in the United States" Journal of the American Medical Association 292 (2004): 1696–1701.

Organization

International Polio Network. 4207 Lindell Blvd., Suite 110, St. Louis, MO 63108–2915. Web site: www.postpolio.org.

March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation. National Office, 1275 Mamaroneck Avenue, White Plains, NY 10605. Web site: www.modimes.org/.

Web Sites

World Health Organization. Global Polio Eradication Progress 2004. Available online at www.polioeradication.org/.

[Article by: Linda K. Bennington, MSN,CNS]



 
Encyclopedia of Public Health: Poliomyelitis
Top

Poliomyelitis, or infantile paralysis, is a highly infectious disease caused by three serotypes of polioviruses. These viruses belong to the Enterovirsus genus of the family Picornaviridae. The infection is transmitted from person to person and rarely produces clinical symptoms. Less than 1 percent of infections will result in paralysis. Death may result, however, especially if respiratory muscles are affected.

Although archeological findings suggest that paralytic poliomyelitis existed before the modern era, the importance of the disease was not recognized until the late nineteenth century. Annual outbreaks of poliomyelitis involving thousands of cases occurred during summer and early fall in various areas of the northern hemisphere during the first half of the twentieth century, making poliomyelitis the leading cause of permanent disability and the cause of numerous premature deaths. The Drinker respirator, also known as the "iron lung," allowed a rapid reduction of poliomyelitis mortality in the 1930s and 1940s.

A major breakthrough in poliomyelitis control took place in 1949, when John F. Enders, Frederick C. Robbins, and Thomas H. Weller developed a tissue culture system for polioviruses. The availability of cultured viruses opened the way to vaccine development. The first poliovirus vaccines were licensed for use in the United States in 1955. These vaccines, developed by Jonas Salk, consisted of formalin-inactivated viruses administered through injections. In 1963, a live oral vaccine, developed by Albert Sabin, was licensed. Within ten years of the introduction of vaccines, the number of poliomyelitis cases decreased by over 95 percent in the United States, and the last case induced by indigenous transmission of wild poliovirus in the United States was detected in 1979. Poliovirus vaccines also allowed rapid declines in disease incidence in Canada, most European countries, Australia, and New Zealand. In Cuba, a two-round mass vaccination campaign in 1962 interrupted poliovirus transmission and rendered the island free of polio.

Most developing countries did not benefit from effective poliomyelitis control before the development of national control programs in the late 1970s. Mass vaccination campaigns, introduced in the Americas during the early 1980s, proved to be an effective means of bringing poliomyelitis under control. The last case of poliomyelitis in the Americas was detected in Peru in 1991, and the western hemisphere was certified as poliofree in 1994.

In 1988, the World Health Assembly launched the Poliomyelitis Eradication Initiative, with a goal of terminating the circulation of wild polioviruses by the year 2000. This worldwide effort relies on three main strategies: high levels of vaccination through routine programs; supplementary vaccination in the form of national immunization days and local door-to-door immunization ("moppingup") campaigns; and surveillance and investigation of all cases that resemble acute poliomyelitis (acute flaccid paralysis). From 1988 to 1999, the global number of estimated poliomyelitis cases decreased from 350,000 to 20,000.

An important benefit of achieving the Poliomyelitis Eradication Initiative goal will be the discontinuation of poliovirus vaccination. Stopping vaccination will require certifying all areas of the world to be free of wild poliovirus. It will also be necessary to ensure that all infectious and potentially infectious material are contained in maximum safety facilities and to stockpile enough vaccines to respond to any outbreak that might occur should poliovirus be released intentionally or unintentionally. In this way poliomyelitis eradication would follow the path pioneered by smallpox eradication.

(SEE ALSO: Communicable Disease Control; Immunizations; Smallpox)

Bibliography

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2000). "Poliomyelitis Prevention in the United States: Updated Recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (AICP)." Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 49(RR-5):1–22.

Robbins, F. C. (1999). "The History of Polio Vaccine Development." In Vaccine, 3rd edition, eds. S. A. Plotkin and W. A. Orenstein. Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders.

Sutter, R. W; Cochi, S. L; and Melnick, J. L. (1999). "Live Attenuated Poliovirus Vaccines." In Vaccine, 3rd edition, eds. S. A. Plotkin and W. A. Orenstein. Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders.

World Health Organization. Polio Eradication. Available at http://www.polioeradication.org.

— PATRICK L. F. ZUBER



 

Acute infectious viral disease that can cause flaccid paralysis of muscles. Severe epidemics killed or paralyzed many people, mostly children and young adults, until the 1960s, when Jonas Salk's injectable killed vaccine and Albert B. Sabin's oral attenuated live vaccine controlled polio in the developed world. Flulike symptoms with diarrhea may progress to back and limb pain, muscle tenderness, and stiff neck. Destruction of spinal cord motor cells causes paralysis, ranging from transient weakness to complete, permanent paralysis, in fewer than 20% of patients. Patients may lose the ability to use their limbs, to breathe, or to swallow and speak. They may need physical medicine and rehabilitation, mechanical breathing assistance, or tracheal suction to remove secretions. A "postpolio syndrome" occurs decades later in some cases, with weakness of muscles that had recovered.

For more information on poliomyelitis, visit Britannica.com.

 
US History Encyclopedia: Poliomyelitis
Top

Poliomyelitis, or infantile paralysis, was one of the most feared diseases of the twentieth century, especially for its ability to cripple children and adolescents. The disease is caused by one of three strains of intestinal virus that under certain conditions invades and damages or destroys the anterior horn cells of the spinal cord. Paralysis is caused when damaged or destroyed nerves can no longer enervate muscles. The virus is commonly spread through contaminated fecal material. Before modern sanitation the poliovirus was constantly present, and most individuals were infected as young children, thereby gaining protective antibodies. Epidemics occurred when modern sanitation interrupted virus circulation for several years, creating a large susceptible population. In epidemics, perhaps as many as 90 to 95 percent of those infected had inapparent cases and a flu-like illness with no paralysis. Four to eight percent of those infected had an abortive case with mild symptoms. Less than 2 percent of all infections reached the central nervous system and caused paralysis. Polio killed when the muscles involved in breathing were paralyzed, but the disease was rarely fatal.

The first sizable polio epidemic in the United States occurred in Vermont in 1894. Recurrent epidemics in Europe and North America sparked research on the disease, and in 1908 the Vienna immunologist Karl Landsteiner discovered the poliovirus. Simon Flexner, the director of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in New York, soon isolated the virus in the United States and discovered polio antibodies in patients.

In 1916, New York and the Northeast experienced the nation's most severe polio epidemic, with 27,000 cases and 6,000 deaths. In New York City alone there were 8,928 cases and 2,407 deaths. This epidemic puzzled physicians and frightened citizens. Polio struck both infants and adults, individuals living in clean, sanitary conditions and those living in filth, the wealthy and the poor. Lacking effective cures and vaccines, public health officials conducted a campaign to clean up the city and eradicate the flies believed to carry the disease. Polio patients were quarantined in their homes or removed, sometimes forcibly, to hastily established isolation hospitals. For the next four decades epidemics of poliomyelitis struck some part of the nation every year.

In 1921, Franklin D. Roosevelt, who later served as governor of New York and president of the United States, developed polio while vacationing at the family home. Seeking to regain the use of his paralyzed legs, he discovered the therapeutic effects of warm mineral water at a failing resort in Warm Springs, Georgia. In 1926 he purchased the resort and, with the help of his law partner, Basil O'Connor, turned it into a model facility for polio rehabilitation, although Roosevelt himself never walked unaided.

During the 1920s and 1930s, scientists and physicians sought to better understand the disease and to find a cure or vaccine. The researchers James D. Trask, John R. Paul, and Dorothy Horstmann of the Yale University Poliomyelitis Study Unit confirmed polio's character as an intestinal disease when they isolated the virus in water supplies and sewage during epidemics. Australian scientists in 1931 discovered that there were at least two different strains of poliovirus. Scientists ultimately discovered a third strain and placed the poliovirus in the family of enteroviruses. In 1935 two American physicians, Maurice Brodie in New York and John A. Kolmer in Philadelphia, developed and tested polio vaccines. These vaccines, however, proved ineffective and may actually have caused cases of the disease.

Polio rehabilitation also advanced in the 1930s, especially at the Georgia Warm Springs Foundation established by Roosevelt. The President's Birthday Ball Commission began raising funds in 1934 to support rehabilitation and research and was succeeded in 1938 by the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis headed by Basil O'Connor. The National Foundation's March of Dimes campaign raised over $600 million between 1938 and 1962. About 60 percent of this money assisted individuals with hospital and doctor bills, and about 11 percent was spent on grants to scientists. The iron lung, a large canister-shaped respirator that "breathed" for patients with paralyzed respiratory muscles was developed in the 1930s. In the 1940s, Elizabeth Kenny, an Australian nurse, introduced her unorthodox ideas for treating polio paralysis. In place of immobility and casts to prevent the contraction of paralyzed limbs, Kenny applied hot packs to sooth paralyzed muscles and movement in order to maintain flexibility and retrain paralyzed muscles. Although many doctors rejected her theories about the causes of polio paralysis, her therapeutic practices soon became commonplace.

In the late 1940s, John F. Enders, Thomas H. Weller, and Frederick C. Robbins, physicians at Harvard funded by the National Foundation, first grew poliovirus on tissue culture outside the body, necessary for a successful vaccine. They won the Nobel Prize in 1954 for their discovery. The National Foundation also funded a typing program to identify all the possible strains of the virus in anticipation of producing a vaccine against every variant.

This research occurred against the background of an increasing incidence of epidemics in the late 1940s and early 1950s. Nine of the ten worst years for polio occurred between 1945 and 1955, and the epidemic of 1952 was second only to 1916 in its severity. The improved sanitation of the postwar years, the move to the suburbs, and the baby boom ensured that many children and even adolescents were vulnerable. Those years were marked by summers of fear when parents kept their children out of swimming pools and movie theaters and warned them against drinking from water fountains. The fund-raising of the March of Dimes, the information disseminated by the National Foundation, and the heartbreaking personal narratives that appeared in popular magazines kept polio in the forefront of the nation's consciousness. The specter of the crippling paralysis of polio threatened the postwar American Dream of healthy, happy children.

The fund-raising efforts of the March of Dimes and the laboratory work of the physicians came together in the 1950s. Jonas Salk, a University of Pittsburgh physician, applied lessons he had learned working on influenza vaccine and developed a successful killed virus vaccine that could be mass produced. By the early 1950s he was conducting preliminary trials of the vaccine. In 1954 the National Foundation arranged for a large-scale field trial of the Salk vaccine conducted by Dr. Thomas Francis Jr. of the University of Michigan. Over 1.8 million children were enrolled as "polio pioneers" in the trial. On 12 April 1955, Francis announced that the Salk vaccine was both safe and effective in protecting vaccinated children from polio. The U.S. government licensed the vaccine the same day. Basil O'Connor had already ordered millions of doses from pharmaceutical companies in order to begin a mass vaccination immediately. Unfortunately, a few weeks later, a bad batch of vaccine produced by Cutter Laboratories resulted in more than 200 cases of vaccine-associated poliomyelitis, including eleven deaths. This was an isolated episode, and the vaccination of America's children soon continued. Even as many children were protected by the Salk vaccine, Albert Sabin, also supported by the National Foundation, worked on an attenuated poliovirus vaccine. An attenuated vaccine, in which the virus was live but significantly weakened, had several advantages. It induced a stronger, longer lasting immune response; immunity was achieved more quickly; and it could be given orally instead of being injected. After field trials in the United States, the Soviet Union, and elsewhere, the Sabin vaccine was licensed for use in 1962. These two vaccines virtually eliminated poliomyelitis in the United States by the early 1960s. Since then only a handful of cases have occurred annually, usually in new immigrants or as vaccine-associated cases.

The survivors of the postwar polio epidemics often spent long periods in rehabilitation hospitals before being fitted with braces, wheelchairs, and respirators that allowed them to return to families, school, and work. Because of the barriers they faced in attempting to live and work, polio survivors were often in the forefront of the disability rights movement that emerged in the 1970s. Activists like Ed Roberts, who was one of the founders of the Independent Living Movement, insisted that individuals with disabilities had a right to accessible living and working environments. In the 1980s, many polio survivors began experiencing increased pain, muscle weakness and even paralysis that physicians eventually identified as post-polio syndrome, an apparent effect of the overuse of nerves and muscles to compensate for the destruction caused by the initial infection. The oral polio vaccine also came under attack in the United States for causing eight to ten cases of polio every year. In 2000 the federal government recommended returning to a safer Salk-type killed virus. The Sabin vaccine, however, remained in use overseas as the World Health Organization tried to eradicate the poliovirus worldwide. Thus in the twenty-first century, poliomyelitis, which was so feared in the twentieth century, may become only the second infectious disease, after smallpox, to be eliminated as a threat to humans.

Bibliography

Black, Kathryn. In the Shadow of Polio: A Personal and Social History. Reading, Mass.: Addison-Wesley, 1996.

Gould, Tony. A Summer Plague: Polio and Its Survivors. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995.

Paul, John R. A History of Poliomyelitis. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1971.

Rogers, Naomi. Dirt and Disease: Polio Before FDR. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1990.

Seavey, Nina Gilden, Jane S. Smith, and Paul Wagner. A Paralyzing Fear: The Triumph Over Polio in America. New York: TV Books, 1998.

Smith, Jane S. Patenting the Sun: Polio and the Salk Vaccine. New York: William Morrow, 1990.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: poliomyelitis
Top
poliomyelitis ('lēōmī'əlī'tĭs) , polio, or infantile paralysis, acute viral infection, mainly of children but also affecting older persons. There are three immunologic types of poliomyelitis virus; exposure to one type produces immunity only to that type, so infection with the other types is still possible. Spread of the infection is primarily through contact with an infected person. Most people who contract polio either exhibit no symptoms or experience only minor illness; however, such individuals can harbor the virus and spread it to others. Less than 1% of the people who get infected develop paralysis.

The virus enters the body by way of the mouth, invades the bloodstream, and may be carried to the central nervous system, where it causes lesions of the gray matter of the spinal cord and brain. The illness begins with fever, headache, stiff neck and back, and muscle pain and tenderness. If there is involvement of the central nervous system, paralysis ensues. Of those patients who develop paralytic poliomyelitis, about 25% sustain severe permanent disability, another 25% have mild disabilities, and 50% recover with no residual paralysis. The disease is usually fatal if the nerve cells in the brain are attacked (bulbar poliomyelitis), causing paralysis of essential muscles, such as those controlling swallowing, heartbeat, and respiration. There is no specific drug for treatment. For reasons not clearly understood, some people who have had severe polio experience postpolio syndrome, a condition in which new weakness and pain occurs years later in previously affected muscles.

The incidence of poliomyelitis declined radically in the United States when a mass immunization program with the Salk vaccine, a preparation made from killed organisms and injected, was begun in 1955. By 1961 the Sabin vaccine, a preparation made from weakened living organisms and taken orally, was released for use. Since then the disease has been virtually eliminated in the Americas, Europe, and Australasia, but vaccination programs continue because of polio's existence in other parts of the world (mainly South Asia and parts of East and West Africa) and the ease of travel.

In 1988 the World Health Organization began a global vaccination campaign to eradicate the disease—which continued to paralyze hundreds of thousands of children each year—by 2000. Although the date of eradication was later pushed back to 2005 (and even later a set deadline was abandoned), by 2003 there were less than a thousand new cases of polio worldwide. In 2003–4 the campaign was slowed when Muslim states in N Nigeria refused to use vaccines they believed would sterilize women, leading to an increase in cases there and in neighboring countries and to outbreaks of the disease in 17 countries including Yemen and Indonesia. Some other African countries also experienced new outbreaks of the disease from other sources. However, by early 2007, polio was, according to WHO, endemic in India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Nigeria. Other experts also classified cases in Somalia and Ethiopia as endemic, and the status of the disease in Congo (Kinshasa), where civil war had long disrupted medical care, was unclear.


 
Health Dictionary: poliomyelitis
Top
(poh-lee-oh-meye-uh-leye-tis)

An acute disease, and an infectious disease, caused by a virus, that brings about inflammation of certain nerve cells in the spinal cord. It can have a wide range of effects, from mild to severe, including paralysis, permanent disability, and death. In the United States, the disease has now largely vanished since the development of a vaccine against it. (See Sabin vaccine and Salk vaccine.)

  • The history of polio, which went from a major public health problem to a minor one in a short time, is often used as an example of the benefits of medical research.
  • President Franklin D. Roosevelt suffered from poliomyelitis. During his presidency, he could not walk unaided.

  •  
    Veterinary Dictionary: poliomyelitis
    Top

    Inflammation of the gray matter of the brain; also the name applied to the viral disease of humans and also known as polio.

     
    Essay: Stopping an epidemic
    Top

    Poliomyelitis, commonly called polio, was first described in 1789, but not fully recognized until 1840. In the United States, it first became a feared disease when a small epidemic in 1894 struck Vermont, because it singled out children and often caused paralysis or death. A larger outbreak began in 1916, also striking the East Coast. Franklin D. Roosevelt, later president of the United States, was paralyzed from the waist down by the disease in 1921. Another large outbreak hit the West Coast in 1934. In the late 1940s and early 1950s, a major epidemic of the disease struck the entire United States, infecting tens of thousands each year.

    As early as 1908, the cause of polio had been identified -- a virus. Jonas Salk, a medical doctor, had worked on the vaccine for the influenza virus during the 1940s. As the head of the Virus Research Laboratory at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, he began the study of the virus causing polio. He confirmed the existence of three types of polio viruses and started growing them in cultures of monkey kidney tissue. He prepared vaccines by killing these viruses with formaldehyde. The killed viruses did not cause the disease, but did stimulate the production of antibodies that protect the human organism against the disease.

    In 1952 Salk tested the vaccine on children who had already experienced polio and thus were immune to the virus. The vaccine increased the amount of antibodies in these children, elevating their immunity. The first trial on children who never had polio took place in 1954; it showed the vaccine to be safe and effective. Throughout the 1950s the incidence of polio was reduced drastically worldwide as a result of the Salk vaccine. By 1957 the number of new cases of the disease in the United States had been reduced from 35,000 in 1953 to 5600.

    Albert Sabin, a medical doctor who also had studied the polio virus, prepared a different vaccine containing a live strain of a virus. This virus also stimulates the production of antibodies but is too weak to cause the disease itself. The Sabin vaccine, which (unlike the Salk vaccine) can be administered orally, was tested in large-scale trials in 1957 in the United States and other countries. It was adopted in the Soviet Union and Europe in 1959, and was approved in the United States in 1961. It has two advantages over the Salk vaccine -- it can be administered orally and, since it is alive and therefore infectious, it provides some immunity to persons who come in contact with the one who takes the vaccine. By 1964, two years after introduction of the Sabin vaccine, the number of new cases in the United States was reduced to 121 and by 1979 there were no new cases at all that originated in the United States.

    Around the world, however, the majority of people were still unvaccinated, so as many as 350,000 cases a year were still occurring in the late 1980s. In 1988 the World Health Organization (WHO) initiated a drive to eradicate polio completely, as another virus-borne disease, smallpox, had been defeated by vaccination. By 2003 the disease had been eliminated (except for isolated cases) everywhere except India, Pakistan, and Nigeria, with fewer than 300 new cases in those nations. At that time, WHO aimed for complete eradication by the end of 2004.

     
    Wikipedia: Poliomyelitis
    Top
    Poliomyelitis
    Classification and external resources
    A man with an atrophied right leg due to poliomyelitis.
    ICD-10 A80., B91.
    ICD-9 045, 138
    DiseasesDB 10209
    MedlinePlus 001402
    eMedicine ped/1843  pmr/6
    MeSH C02.182.600.700

    Poliomyelitis, often called polio or infantile paralysis, is an acute viral infectious disease spread from person to person, primarily via the fecal-oral route.[1] The term derives from the Greek poliós (πολιός), meaning "grey", myelós (µυελός), referring to the "spinal cord", and the suffix -itis, which denotes inflammation.[2] Although around 90% of polio infections cause no symptoms at all, affected individuals can exhibit a range of symptoms if the virus enters the blood stream.[3] In about 1% of cases the virus enters the central nervous system, preferentially infecting and destroying motor neurons, leading to muscle weakness and acute flaccid paralysis. Different types of paralysis may occur, depending on the nerves involved. Spinal polio is the most common form, characterized by asymmetric paralysis that most often involves the legs. Bulbar polio leads to weakness of muscles innervated by cranial nerves. Bulbospinal polio is a combination of bulbar and spinal paralysis.[4]

    Poliomyelitis was first recognized as a distinct condition by Jakob Heine in 1840.[5] Its causative agent, poliovirus, was identified in 1908 by Karl Landsteiner.[5] Although major polio epidemics were unknown before the late 19th century, polio was one of the most dreaded childhood diseases of the 20th century. Polio epidemics have crippled thousands of people, mostly young children; the disease has caused paralysis and death for much of human history. Polio had existed for thousands of years quietly as an endemic pathogen until the 1880s, when major epidemics began to occur in Europe; soon after, widespread epidemics appeared in the United States.[6] By 1910, much of the world experienced a dramatic increase in polio cases and frequent epidemics became regular events, primarily in cities during the summer months. These epidemics—which left thousands of children and adults paralyzed—provided the impetus for a "Great Race" towards the development of a vaccine. The polio vaccines developed by Jonas Salk in 1952 and Albert Sabin in 1962 are credited with reducing the global number of polio cases per year from many hundreds of thousands to around a thousand.[7] Enhanced vaccination efforts led by the World Health Organization, UNICEF and Rotary International could result in global eradication of the disease.[8]

    Contents

    Classification

    Outcomes of poliovirus infection
    Outcome Proportion of cases[4]
    Asymptomatic 90–95%
    Minor illness 4–8%
    Non-paralytic aseptic
    meningitis
    1–2%
    Paralytic poliomyelitis 0.1–0.5%
    — Spinal polio 79% of paralytic cases
    — Bulbospinal polio 19% of paralytic cases
    — Bulbar polio 2% of paralytic cases

    The term poliomyelitis is used to identify the disease caused by any of the three serotypes of poliovirus. Two basic patterns of polio infection are described: a minor illness which does not involve the central nervous system (CNS), sometimes called abortive poliomyelitis, and a major illness involving the CNS, which may be paralytic or non-paralytic.[9] In most people with a normal immune system, a poliovirus infection is asymptomatic. Rarely the infection produces minor symptoms; these may include upper respiratory tract infection (sore throat and fever), gastrointestinal disturbances (nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, constipation or, rarely, diarrhea), and influenza-like illnesses.[4]

    The virus enters the central nervous system in about 3% of infections. Most patients with CNS involvement develop non-paralytic aseptic meningitis, with symptoms of headache, neck, back, abdominal and extremity pain, fever, vomiting, lethargy and irritability.[2][10] Approximately 1 in 200 to 1 in 1000 cases progress to paralytic disease, in which the muscles become weak, floppy and poorly controlled, and finally completely paralyzed; this condition is known as acute flaccid paralysis.[11] Depending on the site of paralysis, paralytic poliomyelitis is classified as spinal, bulbar, or bulbospinal. Encephalitis, an infection of the brain tissue itself, can occur in rare cases and is usually restricted to infants. It is characterized by confusion, changes in mental status, headaches, fever, and less commonly seizures and spastic paralysis.[12]

    Cause

    A TEM micrograph of poliovirus

    Poliomyelitis is caused by infection with a member of the genus Enterovirus known as poliovirus (PV). This group of RNA viruses prefers to inhabit the gastrointestinal tract.[1] PV infects and causes disease in humans alone.[3] Its structure is very simple, composed of a single (+) sense RNA genome enclosed in a protein shell called a capsid.[3] In addition to protecting the virus’s genetic material, the capsid proteins enable poliovirus to infect certain types of cells. Three serotypes of poliovirus have been identified—poliovirus type 1 (PV1), type 2 (PV2), and type 3 (PV3)—each with a slightly different capsid protein.[13] All three are extremely virulent and produce the same disease symptoms.[3] PV1 is the most commonly encountered form, and the one most closely associated with paralysis.[14]

    Individuals who are exposed to the virus, either through infection or by immunization with polio vaccine, develop immunity. In immune individuals, IgA antibodies against poliovirus are present in the tonsils and gastrointestinal tract and are able to block virus replication; IgG and IgM antibodies against PV can prevent the spread of the virus to motor neurons of the central nervous system.[15] Infection or vaccination with one serotype of poliovirus does not provide immunity against the other serotypes, and full immunity requires exposure to each serotype.[15]

    Transmission

    Poliomyelitis is highly contagious and spreads easily by human-to-human contact.[15] In endemic areas, wild polioviruses can infect virtually the entire human population.[16] It is seasonal in temperate climates, with peak transmission occurring in summer and autumn.[15] These seasonal differences are far less pronounced in tropical areas.[16] The time between first exposure and first symptoms, known as the incubation period, is usually 6 to 20 days, with a maximum range of 3 to 35 days.[17] Virus particles are excreted in the feces for several weeks following initial infection.[17] The disease is transmitted primarily via the fecal-oral route, by ingesting contaminated food or water. It is occasionally transmitted via the oral-oral route,[14] a mode especially visible in areas with good sanitation and hygiene.[15] Polio is most infectious between 7–10 days before and 7–10 days after the appearance of symptoms, but transmission is possible as long as the virus remains in the saliva or feces.[14]

    Factors that increase the risk of polio infection or affect the severity of the disease include immune deficiency,[18] malnutrition,[19] tonsillectomy,[20] physical activity immediately following the onset of paralysis,[21] skeletal muscle injury due to injection of vaccines or therapeutic agents,[22] and pregnancy.[23] Although the virus can cross the placenta during pregnancy, the fetus does not appear to be affected by either maternal infection or polio vaccination.[24] Maternal antibodies also cross the placenta, providing passive immunity that protects the infant from polio infection during the first few months of life.[25]

    Pathophysiology

    A blockage of the lumbar anterior spinal cord artery due to polio (PV3)

    Poliovirus enters the body through the mouth, infecting the first cells it comes in contact with—the pharynx (throat) and intestinal mucosa. It gains entry by binding to an immunoglobulin-like receptor, known as the poliovirus receptor or CD155, on the cell membrane.[26] The virus then hijacks the host cell's own machinery, and begins to replicate. Poliovirus divides within gastrointestinal cells for about a week, from where it spreads to the tonsils (specifically the follicular dendritic cells residing within the tonsilar germinal centers), the intestinal lymphoid tissue including the M cells of Peyer's patches, and the deep cervical and mesenteric lymph nodes, where it multiplies abundantly. The virus is subsequently absorbed into the bloodstream.[27]

    Known as viremia, the presence of virus in the bloodstream enables it to be widely distributed throughout the body. Poliovirus can survive and multiply within the blood and lymphatics for long periods of time, sometimes as long as 17 weeks.[28] In a small percentage of cases, it can spread and replicate in other sites such as brown fat, the reticuloendothelial tissues, and muscle.[29] This sustained replication causes a major viremia, and leads to the development of minor influenza-like symptoms. Rarely, this may progress and the virus may invade the central nervous system, provoking a local inflammatory response. In most cases this causes a self-limiting inflammation of the meninges, the layers of tissue surrounding the brain, which is known as non-paralytic aseptic meningitis.[2] Penetration of the CNS provides no known benefit to the virus, and is quite possibly an incidental deviation of a normal gastrointestinal infection.[30] The mechanisms by which poliovirus spreads to the CNS are poorly understood, but it appears to be primarily a chance event—largely independent of the age, gender, or socioeconomic position of the individual.[30]

    Paralytic polio

    Denervation of skeletal muscle tissue secondary to poliovirus infection can lead to paralysis.

    In around 1% of infections, poliovirus spreads along certain nerve fiber pathways, preferentially replicating in and destroying motor neurons within the spinal cord, brain stem, or motor cortex. This leads to the development of paralytic poliomyelitis, the various forms of which (spinal, bulbar, and bulbospinal) vary only with the amount of neuronal damage and inflammation that occurs, and the region of the CNS that is affected.

    The destruction of neuronal cells produces lesions within the spinal ganglia; these may also occur in the reticular formation, vestibular nuclei, cerebellar vermis, and deep cerebellar nuclei.[30] Inflammation associated with nerve cell destruction often alters the color and appearance of the gray matter in the spinal column, causing it to appear reddish and swollen.[2] Other destructive changes associated with paralytic disease occur in the forebrain region, specifically the hypothalamus and thalamus.[30] The molecular mechanisms by which poliovirus causes paralytic disease are poorly understood.

    Early symptoms of paralytic polio include high fever, headache, stiffness in the back and neck, asymmetrical weakness of various muscles, sensitivity to touch, difficulty swallowing, muscle pain, loss of superficial and deep reflexes, paresthesia (pins and needles), irritability, constipation, or difficulty urinating. Paralysis generally develops one to ten days after early symptoms begin, progresses for two to three days, and is usually complete by the time the fever breaks.[31]

    The likelihood of developing paralytic polio increases with age, as does the extent of paralysis. In children, non-paralytic meningitis is the most likely consequence of CNS involvement, and paralysis occurs in only 1 in 1000 cases. In adults, paralysis occurs in 1 in 75 cases.[32] In children under five years of age, paralysis of one leg is most common; in adults, extensive paralysis of the chest and abdomen also affecting all four limbs—quadriplegia—is more likely.[33] Paralysis rates also vary depending on the serotype of the infecting poliovirus; the highest rates of paralysis (1 in 200) are associated with poliovirus type 1, the lowest rates (1 in 2,000) are associated with type 2.[34]

    Spinal polio

    The location of motor neurons in the anterior horn cells of the spinal column.

    Spinal polio is the most common form of paralytic poliomyelitis; it results from viral invasion of the motor neurons of the anterior horn cells, or the ventral (front) gray matter section in the spinal column, which are responsible for movement of the muscles, including those of the trunk, limbs and the intercostal muscles.[11] Virus invasion causes inflammation of the nerve cells, leading to damage or destruction of motor neuron ganglia. When spinal neurons die, Wallerian degeneration takes place, leading to weakness of those muscles formerly innervated by the now dead neurons.[35] With the destruction of nerve cells, the muscles no longer receive signals from the brain or spinal cord; without nerve stimulation, the muscles atrophy, becoming weak, floppy and poorly controlled, and finally completely paralyzed.[11] Progression to maximum paralysis is rapid (two to four days), and is usually associated with fever and muscle pain.[35] Deep tendon reflexes are also affected, and are usually absent or diminished; sensation (the ability to feel) in the paralyzed limbs, however, is not affected.[35]

    The extent of spinal paralysis depends on the region of the cord affected, which may be cervical, thoracic, or lumbar.[36] The virus may affect muscles on both sides of the body, but more often the paralysis is asymmetrical.[27] Any limb or combination of limbs may be affected—one leg, one arm, or both legs and both arms. Paralysis is often more severe proximally (where the limb joins the body) than distally (the fingertips and toes).[27]

    Bulbar polio

    The location and anatomy of the bulbar region (in orange)

    Making up about 2% of cases of paralytic polio, bulbar polio occurs when poliovirus invades and destroys nerves within the bulbar region of the brain stem.[4] The bulbar region is a white matter pathway that connects the cerebral cortex to the brain stem. The destruction of these nerves weakens the muscles supplied by the cranial nerves, producing symptoms of encephalitis, and causes difficulty breathing, speaking and swallowing.[10] Critical nerves affected are the glossopharyngeal nerve, which partially controls swallowing and functions in the throat, tongue movement and taste; the vagus nerve, which sends signals to the heart, intestines, and lungs; and the accessory nerve, which controls upper neck movement. Due to the effect on swallowing, secretions of mucus may build up in the airway causing suffocation.[31] Other signs and symptoms include facial weakness, caused by destruction of the trigeminal nerve and facial nerve, which innervate the cheeks, tear ducts, gums, and muscles of the face, among other structures; double vision; difficulty in chewing; and abnormal respiratory rate, depth, and rhythm, which may lead to respiratory arrest. Pulmonary edema and shock are also possible, and may be fatal.[36]

    Bulbospinal Polio

    Approximately 19% of all paralytic polio cases have both bulbar and spinal symptoms; this subtype is called respiratory polio or bulbospinal polio.[4] Here the virus affects the upper part of the cervical spinal cord (C3 through C5), and paralysis of the diaphragm occurs. The critical nerves affected are the phrenic nerve, which drives the diaphragm to inflate the lungs, and those that drive the muscles needed for swallowing. By destroying these nerves this form of polio affects breathing, making it difficult or impossible for the patient to breathe without the support of a ventilator. It can lead to paralysis of the arms and legs and may also affect swallowing and heart functions.[37]

    Diagnosis

    Paralytic poliomyelitis may be clinically suspected in individuals experiencing acute onset of flaccid paralysis in one or more limbs with decreased or absent tendon reflexes in the affected limbs, that cannot be attributed to another apparent cause, and without sensory or cognitive loss.[38]

    A laboratory diagnosis is usually made based on recovery of poliovirus from a stool sample or a swab of the pharynx. Antibodies to poliovirus can be diagnostic, and are generally detected in the blood of infected patients early in the course of infection.[4] Analysis of the patient's cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), which is collected by a lumbar puncture ("spinal tap"), reveals an increased number of white blood cells (primarily lymphocytes) and a mildly elevated protein level. Detection of virus in the CSF is diagnostic of paralytic polio, but rarely occurs.[4]

    If poliovirus is isolated from a patient experiencing acute flaccid paralysis, it is further tested through oligonucleotide mapping (genetic fingerprinting), or more recently by PCR amplification, to determine whether it is "wild type" (that is, the virus encountered in nature) or "vaccine type" (derived from a strain of poliovirus used to produce polio vaccine).[39] It is important to determine the source of the virus because for each reported case of paralytic polio caused by wild poliovirus, it is estimated that another 200 to 3,000 contagious asymptomatic carriers exist.[40]

    Prognosis

    Patients with abortive polio infections recover completely. In those that develop only aseptic meningitis, the symptoms can be expected to persist for two to ten days, followed by complete recovery.[41] In cases of spinal polio, if the affected nerve cells are completely destroyed, paralysis will be permanent; cells that are not destroyed but lose function temporarily may recover within four to six weeks after onset.[41] Half the patients with spinal polio recover fully, one quarter recover with mild disability and the remaining quarter are left with severe disability.[42] The degree of both acute paralysis and residual paralysis is likely to be proportional to the degree of viremia, and inversely proportional to the degree of immunity.[30] Spinal polio is rarely fatal.[31]

    A child with a deformity of her right leg due to polio

    Without respiratory support, consequences of poliomyelitis with respiratory involvement include suffocation or pneumonia from aspiration of secretions.[43] Overall, 5–10% of patients with paralytic polio die due to the paralysis of muscles used for breathing. The mortality rate varies by age: 2–5% of children and up to 15–30% of adults die.[4] Bulbar polio often causes death if respiratory support is not provided;[37] with support, its mortality rate ranges from 25 to 75%, depending on the age of the patient.[4][44] When positive pressure ventilators are available, the mortality can be reduced to 15%.[45]

    Recovery

    Many cases of poliomyelitis result in only temporary paralysis.[11] Nerve impulses return to the formerly paralyzed muscle within a month, and recovery is usually complete in six to eight months.[41] The neurophysiological processes involved in recovery following acute paralytic poliomyelitis are quite effective; muscles are able to retain normal strength even if half the original motor neurons have been lost.[46] Paralysis remaining after one year is likely to be permanent, although modest recoveries of muscle strength are possible 12 to 18 months after infection.[41]

    One mechanism involved in recovery is nerve terminal sprouting, in which remaining brainstem and spinal cord motor neurons develop new branches, or axonal sprouts.[47] These sprouts can reinnervate orphaned muscle fibers that have been denervated by acute polio infection,[48] restoring the fibers' capacity to contract and improving strength.[49] Terminal sprouting may generate a few significantly enlarged motor neurons doing work previously performed by as many as four or five units:[32] a single motor neuron that once controlled 200 muscle cells might control 800 to 1000 cells. Other mechanisms that occur during the rehabilitation phase, and contribute to muscle strength restoration, include myofiber hypertrophy—enlargement of muscle fibers through exercise and activity—and transformation of type II muscle fibers to type I muscle fibers.[48][50]

    In addition to these physiological processes, the body possesses a number of compensatory mechanisms to maintain function in the presence of residual paralysis. These include the use of weaker muscles at a higher than usual intensity relative to the muscle's maximal capacity, enhancing athletic development of previously little-used muscles, and using ligaments for stability, which enables greater mobility.[50]

    Complications

    Residual complications of paralytic polio often occur following the initial recovery process.[10] Muscle paresis and paralysis can sometimes result in skeletal deformities, tightening of the joints and movement disability. Once the muscles in the limb become flaccid, they may interfere with the function of other muscles. A typical manifestation of this problem is equinus foot (similar to club foot). This deformity develops when the muscles that pull the toes downward are working, but those that pull it upward are not, and the foot naturally tends to drop toward the ground. If the problem is left untreated, the Achilles tendons at the back of the foot retract and the foot cannot take on a normal position. Polio victims that develop equinus foot cannot walk properly because they cannot put their heel on the ground. A similar situation can develop if the arms become paralyzed.[51] In some cases the growth of an affected leg is slowed by polio, while the other leg continues to grow normally. The result is that one leg is shorter than the other and the person limps and leans to one side, in turn leading to deformities of the spine (such as scoliosis).[51] Osteoporosis and increased likelihood of bone fractures may occur. Extended use of braces or wheelchairs may cause compression neuropathy, as well as a loss of proper function of the veins in the legs, due to pooling of blood in paralyzed lower limbs.[37][52] Complications from prolonged immobility involving the lungs, kidneys and heart include pulmonary edema, aspiration pneumonia, urinary tract infections, kidney stones, paralytic ileus, myocarditis and cor pulmonale.[37][52]

    Post-polio syndrome

    Around a quarter of individuals who survive paralytic polio in childhood develop additional symptoms decades after recovering from the acute infection, notably muscle weakness, extreme fatigue, or paralysis. This condition is known as post-polio syndrome (PPS).[53] The symptoms of PPS are thought to involve a failure of the over-sized motor units created during recovery from paralytic disease.[54][55] Factors that increase the risk of PPS include the length of time since acute poliovirus infection, the presence of permanent residual impairment after recovery from the acute illness, and both overuse and disuse of neurons.[53] Post-polio syndrome is not an infectious process, and persons experiencing the syndrome do not shed poliovirus.[4]

    Treatment

    A modern negative pressure ventilator (iron lung)

    There is no cure for polio. The focus of modern treatment has been on providing relief of symptoms, speeding recovery and preventing complications. Supportive measures include antibiotics to prevent infections in weakened muscles, analgesics for pain, moderate exercise and a nutritious diet.[56] Treatment of polio often requires long-term rehabilitation, including physical therapy, braces, corrective shoes and, in some cases, orthopedic surgery.[36]

    Portable ventilators may be required to support breathing. Historically, a noninvasive negative-pressure ventilator, more commonly called an iron lung, was used to artificially maintain respiration during an acute polio infection until a person could breathe independently (generally about one to two weeks). Today many polio survivors with permanent respiratory paralysis use modern jacket-type negative-pressure ventilators that are worn over the chest and abdomen.[43]

    Other historical treatments for polio include hydrotherapy, electrotherapy, massage and passive motion exercises, and surgical treatments such as tendon lengthening and nerve grafting.[11] Devices such as rigid braces and body casts—which tended to cause muscle atrophy due to the limited movement of the user—were also touted as effective treatments.[57]

    Prevention

    Passive immunization

    In 1950, William Hammon at the University of Pittsburgh purified the gamma globulin component of the blood plasma of polio survivors.[58] Hammon proposed that the gamma globulin, which contained antibodies to poliovirus, could be used to halt poliovirus infection, prevent disease, and reduce the severity of disease in other patients who had contracted polio. The results of a large clinical trial were promising; the gamma globulin was shown to be about 80% effective in preventing the development of paralytic poliomyelitis.[59] It was also shown to reduce the severity of the disease in patients that developed polio.[58] The gamma globulin approach was later deemed impractical for widespread use, however, due in large part to the limited supply of blood plasma, and the medical community turned its focus to the development of a polio vaccine.[60]

    Vaccine

    A child receives oral polio vaccine

    Two vaccines are used throughout the world to combat polio. Both vaccines induce immunity to polio, efficiently blocking person-to-person transmission of wild poliovirus, thereby protecting both individual vaccine recipients and the wider community (so-called herd immunity).[61] The first inactivated virus vaccine was developed in 1952 by Jonas Salk, and announced to the world on April 12, 1955.[62] The Salk vaccine, or inactivated poliovirus vaccine (IPV), is based on poliovirus grown in a type of monkey kidney tissue culture (Vero cell line), which is chemically inactivated with formalin.[15] After two doses of IPV (given by injection), 90% or more of individuals develop protective antibody to all three serotypes of poliovirus, and at least 99% are immune to poliovirus following three doses.[4]

    Subsequently, Albert Sabin developed an oral polio vaccine (OPV) using live but weakened (attenuated) virus, produced by the repeated passage of the virus through non-human cells at sub-physiological temperatures.[63] Human trials of Sabin's vaccine began in 1957 and it was licensed in 1962.[64] The attenuated poliovirus in the Sabin vaccine replicates very efficiently in the gut, the primary site of wild poliovirus infection and replication, but the vaccine strain is unable to replicate efficiently within nervous system tissue.[65] A single dose of oral polio vaccine produces immunity to all three poliovirus serotypes in approximately 50% of recipients. Three doses of live-attenuated OPV produce protective antibody to all three poliovirus types in more than 95% of recipients.[4]

    Because OPV is inexpensive, easy to administer, and produces excellent immunity in the intestine (which helps prevent infection with wild virus in areas where it is endemic), it has been the vaccine of choice for controlling poliomyelitis in many countries.[66] On very rare occasions (about 1 case per 750,000 vaccine recipients) the attenuated virus in OPV reverts into a form that can paralyze.[17] Most industrialized countries have switched to IPV, which cannot revert, either as the sole vaccine against poliomyelitis or in combination with oral polio vaccine.[67]

    Eradication

    Following the widespread use of poliovirus vaccine in the mid-1950s, the incidence of poliomyelitis declined dramatically in many industrialized countries. A global effort to eradicate polio began in 1988, led by the World Health Organization, UNICEF, and The Rotary Foundation.[68] These efforts have reduced the number of annual diagnosed cases by 99%; from an estimated 350,000 cases in 1988 to 1,310 cases in 2007.[69][70] Should eradication be successful it will represent only the second time mankind has ever completely eliminated a disease. The first such disease was smallpox, which was officially eradicated in 1979.[71] A number of eradication milestones have already been reached, and several regions of the world have been certified polio-free. The Americas were declared polio-free in 1994.[72] In 2000 polio was officially eradicated in 36 Western Pacific countries, including China and Australia.[73][74] Europe was declared polio-free in 2002.[75] As of 2006, polio remains endemic in only four countries: Nigeria, India, Pakistan, and Afghanistan.[69]

    Much of this work was documented by Brazilian photographer Sebastião Salgado, as a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador, in the book The End of Polio: Global Effort to End a Disease.[76]

    History

    An Egyptian stele thought to represent a polio victim, 18th Dynasty (1403–1365 BC)

    The effects of polio have been known since prehistory; Egyptian paintings and carvings depict otherwise healthy people with withered limbs, and children walking with canes at a young age.[5] The first clinical description was provided by the English physician Michael Underwood in 1789, where he refers to polio as "a debility of the lower extremities".[77] The work of physicians Jakob Heine in 1840 and Karl Oskar Medin in 1890 led to it being known as Heine-Medin disease.[78] The disease was later called infantile paralysis, based on its propensity to affect children.

    Before the 20th century, polio infections were rarely seen in infants before six months of age, most cases occurring in children six months to four years of age.[79] Poorer sanitation of the time resulted in a constant exposure to the virus, which enhanced a natural immunity within the population. In developed countries during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, improvements were made in community sanitation, including better sewage disposal and clean water supplies. These changes drastically increased the proportion of children and adults at risk of paralytic polio infection, by reducing childhood exposure and immunity to the disease.

    Small localized paralytic polio epidemics began to appear in Europe and the United States around 1900.[6] Outbreaks reached pandemic proportions in Europe, North America, Australia, and New Zealand during the first half of the 20th century. By 1950 the peak age incidence of paralytic poliomyelitis in the United States had shifted from infants to children aged five to nine years, when the risk of paralysis is greater; about one-third of the cases were reported in persons over 15 years of age.[80] Accordingly, the rate of paralysis and death due to polio infection also increased during this time.[6] In the United States, the 1952 polio epidemic became the worst outbreak in the nation's history. Of nearly 58,000 cases reported that year 3,145 died and 21,269 were left with mild to disabling paralysis.[81]

    The polio epidemics changed not only the lives of those who survived them, but also affected profound cultural changes; spurring grassroots fund-raising campaigns that would revolutionize medical philanthropy, and giving rise to the modern field of rehabilitation therapy. As one of the largest disabled groups in the world polio survivors also helped to advance the modern disability rights movement through campaigns for the social and civil rights of the disabled. The World Health Organization estimates that there are 10 to 20 million polio survivors worldwide.[82] In 1977 there were 254,000 persons living in the United States who had been paralyzed by polio.[83] According to doctors and local polio support groups, some 40,000 polio survivors with varying degrees of paralysis live in Germany, 30,000 in Japan, 24,000 in France, 16,000 in Australia, 12,000 in Canada and 12,000 in the United Kingdom.[82] Many notable individuals have survived polio and often credit the prolonged immobility and residual paralysis associated with polio as a driving force in their lives and careers.[84]

    The disease was very well publicized during the polio epidemics of the 1950s, with extensive media coverage of any scientific advancements that might lead to a cure. Thus, the scientists working on polio became some of the most famous of the century. Fifteen scientists and two laymen who made important contributions to the knowledge and treatment of poliomyelitis are honored by the Polio Hall of Fame, which was dedicated in 1957 at the Roosevelt Warm Springs Institute for Rehabilitation in Warm Springs, Georgia, USA. In 2008 four organizations (Rotary International, the World Health Organization, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and UNICEF) were added to the Hall of Fame.[85][86]

    See also

    Notes and references

    1. ^ a b Cohen JI (2004). "Chapter 175: Enteroviruses and Reoviruses". in Kasper DL, Braunwald E, Fauci AS, et al. (eds.). Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine (16th ed.). McGraw-Hill Professional. pp. 1144. ISBN 0071402357. 
    2. ^ a b c d Chamberlin SL, Narins B (eds.) (2005). The Gale Encyclopedia of Neurological Disorders. Detroit: Thomson Gale. pp. 1859–70. ISBN 0-7876-9150-X. 
    3. ^ a b c d Ryan KJ, Ray CG (eds.) (2004). "Enteroviruses". Sherris Medical Microbiology (4th ed.). McGraw Hill. pp. 535–7. ISBN 0-8385-8529-9. 
    4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Atkinson W, Hamborsky J, McIntyre L, Wolfe S (eds.) (2007). "Poliomyelitis" (PDF). Epidemiology and Prevention of Vaccine-Preventable Diseases (The Pink Book) (10th ed.). Washington DC: Public Health Foundation. pp. 101–14. http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/pubs/pinkbook/downloads/polio-508.pdf. 
    5. ^ a b c Paul JR (1971). A History of Poliomyelitis. Yale studies in the history of science and medicine. New Haven, Conn: Yale University Press. pp. 16–18. ISBN 0-300-01324-8. 
    6. ^ a b c Trevelyan B, Smallman-Raynor M, Cliff A (2005). "The Spatial Dynamics of Poliomyelitis in the United States: From Epidemic Emergence to Vaccine-Induced Retreat, 1910–1971". Ann Assoc Am Geogr 95 (2): 269–93. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8306.2005.00460.x. PMID 16741562. 
    7. ^ Aylward R (2006). "Eradicating polio: today's challenges and tomorrow's legacy". Ann Trop Med Parasitol 100 (5–6): 401–13. doi:10.1179/136485906X97354. PMID 16899145. 
    8. ^ Heymann D (2006). "Global polio eradication initiative". Bull. World Health Organ. 84 (8): 595. doi:10.2471/BLT.05.029512. PMID 16917643. http://209.85.215.104/search?q=cache:bdeN6aDyjY4J:www.scielosp.org/scielo.php%3Fscript%3Dsci_arttext%26pid%3DS0042-96862003000900020+site:scielosp.org+polio&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us. 
    9. ^ Falconer M, Bollenbach E (2000). "Late functional loss in nonparalytic polio". American journal of physical medicine & rehabilitation / Association of Academic Physiatrists 79 (1): 19–23. doi:10.1097/00002060-200001000-00006. PMID 10678598. 
    10. ^ a b c Leboeuf C (1992) (PDF). The late effects of Polio: Information For Health Care Providers.. Commonwealth Department of Community Services and Health. ISBN 1-875412-05-0. http://www.health.qld.gov.au/polio/gp/GP_Manual.pdf. Retrieved on 2008-08-23. 
    11. ^ a b c d e Frauenthal HWA, Manning JVV (1914). Manual of infantile paralysis, with modern methods of treatment.. Philadelphia Davis. pp. 79–101. OCLC 2078290. http://books.google.com/books?vid=029ZCFMPZ0giNI1KiG6E&id=piyLQnuT-1YC&printsec=titlepage. 
    12. ^ Wood, Lawrence D. H.; Hall, Jesse B.; Schmidt, Gregory D. (2005). Principles of Critical Care (3rd ed.). McGraw-Hill Professional. pp. 870. ISBN 0-07-141640-4. 
    13. ^ Katz, Samuel L.; Gershon, Anne A.; Krugman, Saul; Hotez, Peter J. (2004). Krugman's infectious diseases of children. St. Louis: Mosby. pp. 81–97. ISBN 0-323-01756-8. 
    14. ^ a b c Ohri, Linda K.; Jonathan G. Marquess (1999). "Polio: Will We Soon Vanquish an Old Enemy?". Drug Benefit Trends 11 (6): 41–54. http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/416890. Retrieved on 2008-08-23.  (Available free on Medscape; registration required.)
    15. ^ a b c d e f Kew O, Sutter R, de Gourville E, Dowdle W, Pallansch M (2005). "Vaccine-derived polioviruses and the endgame strategy for global polio eradication". Annu Rev Microbiol 59: 587–635. doi:10.1146/annurev.micro.58.030603.123625. PMID 16153180. 
    16. ^ a b Parker SP (ed.) (1998). McGraw-Hill Concise Encyclopedia of Science & Technology. New York: McGraw-Hill. pp. 67. ISBN 0-07-052659-1. 
    17. ^ a b c Racaniello V (2006). "One hundred years of poliovirus pathogenesis". Virology 344 (1): 9–16. doi:10.1016/j.virol.2005.09.015. PMID 16364730. 
    18. ^ Davis L, Bodian D, Price D, Butler I, Vickers J (1977). "Chronic progressive poliomyelitis secondary to vaccination of an immunodeficient child". N Engl J Med 297 (5): 241–5. PMID 195206. 
    19. ^ Chandra R (1975-06-14). "Reduced secretory antibody response to live attenuated measles and poliovirus vaccines in malnourished children". Br Med J 2 (5971): 583–5. doi:10.1136/bmj.2.5971.583. PMID 1131622. 
    20. ^ Miller A (July 1952). "Incidence of poliomyelitis; the effect of tonsillectomy and other operations on the nose and throat". Calif Med 77 (1): 19–21. PMID 12978882. 
    21. ^ Horstmann D (1950). "Acute poliomyelitis relation of physical activity at the time of onset to the course of the disease". J Am Med Assoc 142 (4): 236–41. PMID 15400610. 
    22. ^ Gromeier M, Wimmer E (1998). "Mechanism of injury-provoked poliomyelitis". J. Virol. 72 (6): 5056–60. PMID 9573275. 
    23. ^ Evans C (1960). "Factors influencing the occurrence of illness during naturally acquired poliomyelitis virus infections" (PDF). Bacteriol Rev 24 (4): 341–52. PMID 13697553. http://mmbr.asm.org/cgi/reprint/24/4/341.pdf. 
    24. ^ Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (Salisbury A, Ramsay M, Noakes K (eds.) (2006) (PDF). Chapter 26:Poliomyelitis. in: Immunisation Against Infectious Disease, 2006. Edinburgh: Stationery Office. pp. 313–29. ISBN 0-11-322528-8. http://www.immunisation.nhs.uk/files/GB_26_polio.pdf. 
    25. ^ Sauerbrei A, Groh A, Bischoff A, Prager J, Wutzler P (2002). "Antibodies against vaccine-preventable diseases in pregnant women and their offspring in the eastern part of Germany". Med Microbiol Immunol 190 (4): 167–72. doi:10.1007/s00430-001-0100-3. PMID 12005329. 
    26. ^ He Y, Mueller S, Chipman P, et al. (2003). "Complexes of poliovirus serotypes with their common cellular receptor, CD155". J Virol 77 (8): 4827–35. doi:10.1128/JVI.77.8.4827-4835.2003. PMID 12663789. http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/77/8/4827?view=long&pmid=12663789. 
    27. ^ a b c Yin-Murphy M, Almond JW (1996). "Picornaviruses: The Enteroviruses: Polioviruses". Baron's Medical Microbiology (Baron S et al., eds.) (4th ed.). Univ of Texas Medical Branch. ISBN 0-9631172-1-1. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=mmed.section.2862. 
    28. ^ Todar K (2006). "Polio". Ken Todar's Microbial World. University of Wisconsin - Madison. http://bioinfo.bact.wisc.edu/themicrobialworld/Polio.html. Retrieved on 2007-04-23. 
    29. ^ Sabin A (1956). "Pathogenesis of poliomyelitis; reappraisal in the light of new data". Science 123 (3209): 1151–7. doi:10.1126/science.123.3209.1151. PMID 13337331. 
    30. ^ a b c d e Mueller S, Wimmer E, Cello J (2005). "Poliovirus and poliomyelitis: a tale of guts, brains, and an accidental event". Virus Res 111 (2): 175–93. doi:10.1016/j.virusres.2005.04.008. PMID 15885840. 
    31. ^ a b c Silverstein A, Silverstein V, Nunn LS (2001). Polio. Diseases and People. Berkeley Heights, NJ: Enslow Publishers. pp. 12. ISBN 0-7660-1592-0. 
    32. ^ a b Gawne AC, Halstead LS (1995). "Post-polio syndrome: pathophysiology and clinical management". Critical Review in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 7: 147–88. http://www.ott.zynet.co.uk/polio/lincolnshire/library/gawne/ppspandcm-s00.html.  Reproduced online with permission by Lincolnshire Post-Polio Library; retrieved on 2007-11-10.
    33. ^ Young GR (1989). "Occupational therapy and the postpolio syndrome". The American journal of occupational therapy 43 (2): 97–103. PMID 2522741. http://www.ott.zynet.co.uk/polio/lincolnshire/library/gryoung/otapps.html. 
    34. ^ Nathanson N, Martin J (1979). "The epidemiology of poliomyelitis: enigmas surrounding its appearance, epidemicity, and disappearance". Am J Epidemiol 110 (6): 672–92. PMID 400274. 
    35. ^ a b c Cono J, Alexander LN (2002). "Chapter 10, Poliomyelitis." (PDF). Vaccine Preventable Disease Surveillance Manual (3rd ed.). Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. pp. 10–1. http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/pubs/surv-manual/3rd-edition-chpt10_polio.pdf. 
    36. ^ a b c Professional Guide to Diseases (Professional Guide Series). Hagerstown, MD: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. 2005. pp. 243–5. ISBN 1-58255-370-X. 
    37. ^ a b c d Hoyt, William Graves; Miller, Neil; Walsh, Frank (2005). Walsh and Hoyt's clinical neuro-ophthalmology. Hagerstown, MD: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. pp. 3264–65. ISBN 0-7817-4814-3. 
    38. ^ "Case definitions for infectious conditions under public health surveillance. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention" (PDF). Morbidity and mortality weekly report 46 (RR-10): 26–7. 1997. PMID 9148133. ftp://ftp.cdc.gov/pub/Publications/mmwr/rr/rr4610.pdf. 
    39. ^ Chezzi C (July 1996). "Rapid diagnosis of poliovirus infection by PCR amplification". J Clin Microbiol 34 (7): 1722–5. PMID 8784577. 
    40. ^ Gawande A (2004-01-12). "The mop-up: eradicating polio from the planet, one child at a time". The New Yorker: 34–40. ISSN 0028-792X. 
    41. ^ a b c d Neumann D (2004). "Polio: its impact on the people of the United States and the emerging profession of physical therapy" (PDF). The Journal of orthopaedic and sports physical therapy 34 (8): 479–92. PMID 15373011. http://www.post-polio.org/edu/hpros/Aug04HistPersNeumann.pdf.  Reproduced online with permission by Post-Polio Health International; retrieved on 2007-11-10.
    42. ^ Cuccurullo SJ (2004). Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Board Review. Demos Medical Publishing. ISBN 1-888799-45-5. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?&rid=physmedrehab.table.8357. 
    43. ^ a b Goldberg A (2002). "Noninvasive mechanical ventilation at home: building upon the tradition". Chest 121 (2): 321–4. doi:10.1378/chest.121.2.321. PMID 11834636. 
    44. ^ Miller AH, Buck LS (1950). "Tracheotomy in bulbar poliomyelitis". California medicine 72 (1): 34–6. PMID 15398892. 
    45. ^ Wackers, G. (1994) (web). Constructivist Medicine. PhD-thesis. Maastricht: Universitaire Pers Maastricht. http://www.fdcw.unimaas.nl/personal/WebSitesMWT/Wackers/proefschrift.html#h4. Retrieved on 2008-01-04. 
    46. ^ Sandberg A, Hansson B, Stålberg E (1999). "Comparison between concentric needle EMG and macro EMG in patients with a history of polio". Clinical Neurophysiology 110 (11): 1900–8. doi:10.1016/S1388-2457(99)00150-9. PMID 10576485. 
    47. ^ Cashman NR, Covault J, Wollman RL, Sanes JR (1987). "Neural cell adhesion molecule in normal, denervated, and myopathic human muscle". Ann. Neurol. 21 (5): 481–9. doi:10.1002/ana.410210512. PMID 3296947. 
    48. ^ a b Agre JC, Rodríquez AA, Tafel JA (1991). "Late effects of polio: critical review of the literature on neuromuscular function". Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation 72 (11): 923–31. doi:10.1016/0003-9993(91)90013-9. PMID 1929813. 
    49. ^ Trojan DA, Cashman NR (2005). "Post-poliomyelitis syndrome". Muscle Nerve 31 (1): 6–19. doi:10.1002/mus.20259. PMID 15599928. 
    50. ^ a b Grimby G, Einarsson G, Hedberg M, Aniansson A (1989). "Muscle adaptive changes in post-polio subjects". Scandinavian journal of rehabilitation medicine 21 (1): 19–26. PMID 2711135. 
    51. ^ a b Sanofi Pasteur. "Poliomyelitis virus (picornavirus, enterovirus), after-effects of the polio, paralysis, deformations". Polio Eradication. http://www.polio.info/polio-eradication/front/index.jsp?siteCode=POLIO&lang=EN&codeRubrique=14. Retrieved on 2008-08-23. 
    52. ^ a b Mayo Clinic Staff (2005-05-19). "Polio: Complications". Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research (MFMER). http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/polio/DS00572/DSECTION=complications. Retrieved on 2007-02-26. 
    53. ^ a b Trojan D, Cashman N (2005). "Post-poliomyelitis syndrome". Muscle Nerve 31 (1): 6–19. doi:10.1002/mus.20259. PMID 15599928. 
    54. ^ Ramlow J, Alexander M, LaPorte R, Kaufmann C, Kuller L (1992). "Epidemiology of the post-polio syndrome". Am. J. Epidemiol. 136 (7): 769–86. PMID 1442743. 
    55. ^ Lin K, Lim Y (2005). "Post-poliomyelitis syndrome: case report and review of the literature" (PDF). Ann Acad Med Singapore 34 (7): 447–9. PMID 16123820. http://www.annals.edu.sg/pdf/34VolNo7200508/V34N7p447.pdf. 
    56. ^ Daniel, Thomas M.; Robbins, Frederick C. (1997). Polio. Rochester, N.Y., USA: University of Rochester Press. pp. 8–10. ISBN 1-58046-066-6. 
    57. ^ Oppewal S (1997). "Sister Elizabeth Kenny, an Australian nurse, and treatment of poliomyelitis victims". Image J Nurs Sch 29 (1): 83–7. doi:10.1111/j.1547-5069.1997.tb01145.x. PMID 9127546. 
    58. ^ a b Hammon W (1955). "Passive immunization against poliomyelitis". Monogr Ser World Health Organ 26: 357–70. PMID 14374581. 
    59. ^ Hammon W, Coriell L, Ludwig E, et al. (1954). "Evaluation of Red Cross gamma globulin as a prophylactic agent for poliomyelitis. 5. Reanalysis of results based on laboratory-confirmed cases". J Am Med Assoc 156 (1): 21–7. PMID 13183798. 
    60. ^ Rinaldo C (2005). "Passive immunization against poliomyelitis: the Hammon gamma globulin field trials, 1951–1953". Am J Public Health 95 (5): 790–9. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2004.040790. PMID 15855454. 
    61. ^ Fine P, Carneiro I (1999-11-15). "Transmissibility and persistence of oral polio vaccine viruses: implications for the global poliomyelitis eradication initiative". Am J Epidemiol 150 (10): 1001–21. PMID 10568615. http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/150/10/1001. 
    62. ^ Spice B (April 4, 2005). "Tireless polio research effort bears fruit and indignation". The Salk vaccine: 50 years later/ second of two parts (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette). http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/05094/482468.stm. Retrieved on 2008-08-23. 
    63. ^ Sabin AB, Boulger LR (1973). "History of Sabin attenuated poliovirus oral live vaccine strains". J Biol Stand 1: 115–8. doi:10.1016/0092-1157(73)90048-6. 
    64. ^ "A Science Odyssey: People and Discoveries". PBS. 1998. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aso/databank/entries/dm52sa.html. Retrieved on 2008-08-23. 
    65. ^ Sabin A, Ramos-Alvarez M, Alvarez-Amezquita J, et al. (1960). "Live, orally given poliovirus vaccine. Effects of rapid mass immunization on population under conditions of massive enteric infection with other viruses". JAMA 173: 1521–6. PMID 14440553. 
    66. ^ "Poliomyelitis prevention: recommendations for use of inactivated poliovirus vaccine and live oral poliovirus vaccine. American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Infectious Diseases". Pediatrics 99 (2): 300–5. 1997. doi:10.1542/peds.99.2.300. PMID 9024465. http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/full/99/2/300. 
    67. ^ "WHO: Vaccines for routine use". International travel and health. 12. http://www.who.int/ith/vaccines/2007_routine_use/en/index11.html. Retrieved on 2008-08-23. 
    68. ^ Mastny, Lisa (January 25, 1999). "Eradicating Polio: A Model for International Cooperation". Worldwatch Institute. http://www.worldwatch.org/node/1644. Retrieved on 2008-08-23. 
    69. ^ a b "Update on vaccine-derived polioviruses". MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 55 (40): 1093–7. 2006. PMID 17035927. 
    70. ^ "Progress toward interruption of wild poliovirus transmission—worldwide, January 2007–April 2008". MMWR Morb. Mortal. Wkly. Rep. 57 (18): 489–94. May 2008. PMID 18463607. http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5718a4.htm. 
    71. ^ "Smallpox". WHO Factsheet. http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/smallpox/en/. Retrieved on 2008-08-23. 
    72. ^ "International Notes Certification of Poliomyelitis Eradication—the Americas, 1994". MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) 43 (39): 720–2. 1994. PMID 7522302. http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/00032760.htm. 
    73. ^ , (2001). "General News. Major Milestone reached in Global Polio Eradication: Western Pacific Region is certified Polio-Free" (PDF). Health Educ Res 16 (1): 109. doi:10.1093/her/16.1.109. http://her.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/16/1/109.pdf. 
    74. ^ D'Souza R, Kennett M, Watson C (2002). "Australia declared polio free". Commun Dis Intell 26 (2): 253–60. PMID 12206379. 
    75. ^ European Region of the World Health Organization (2002-06-21). Europe achieves historic milestone as Region is declared polio-free. Press release. http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/releases/releaseeuro02/en/index.html. Retrieved on 2008-08-23. 
    76. ^ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (August 24, 2007). The End of Polio: Photographs of Sebastião Salgado Opens to Public. Press release. http://www.cdc.gov/media/pressrel/2007/r070824.htm. Retrieved on 2008-06-02. 
    77. ^ Underwood, Michael (1793) (fee required). Debility of the lower extremities. In: A treatise on the diseases [sic] of children, with general directions for the management of infants from the birth (1789). Early American Imprints, 1st series, no. 26291 (filmed); Copyright 2002 by the American Antiquarian Society. 2. Philadelphia: Printed by T. Dobson, no. 41, South Second-Street. pp. 254–6. http://catalog.mwa.org/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?v1=1&ti=1,1&Search%5FArg=Underwood%2C%20Michael&Search%5FCode=OPAU&CNT=10&PID=23682&SEQ=20070223225426&SID=1. Retrieved on 2008-08-23. 
    78. ^ Pearce J (2005). "Poliomyelitis (Heine-Medin disease)". J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 76 (1): 128. doi:10.1136/jnnp.2003.028548. PMID 15608013. 
    79. ^ Robertson S (1993). "Module 6: Poliomyelitis" (PDF). The Immunological Basis for Immunization Series. World Health Organization. Geneva, Switzerland.. http://www.who.int/vaccines-documents/DocsPDF-IBI-e/mod6_e.pdf. Retrieved on 2008-08-23. 
    80. ^ Melnick JL (1990). Poliomyelitis. In: Tropical and Geographical Medicine (2nd ed.). McGraw-Hill. pp. 558–76. ISBN 007068328X. 
    81. ^ Zamula E (1991). "A New Challenge for Former Polio Patients". FDA Consumer 25 (5): 21–5. http://www.fda.gov/bbs/topics/CONSUMER/CON00006.html. 
    82. ^ a b "After Effects of Polio Can Harm Survivors 40 Years Later". March of Dimes. 2001-06-01. http://www.marchofdimes.com/aboutus/791_1718.asp. Retrieved on 2008-08-23. 
    83. ^ Frick NM, Bruno RL (1986). "Post-polio sequelae: physiological and psychological overview". Rehabilitation literature 47 (5–6): 106–11. PMID 3749588. 
    84. ^ Richard L. Bruno (2002). The Polio Paradox: Understanding and Treating "Post-Polio Syndrome" and Chronic Fatigue. New York: Warner Books. pp. 105–6. ISBN 0-446-69069-4. 
    85. ^ Skinner, Winston (2008-11-15). "Four added to Polio Hall of Fame at Warm Springs". The Times-Herald (Newnan, GA). http://www.times-herald.com/Local/Four-added-to-Polio-Hall-of-Fame-at-Warm-Springs-589785. Retrieved on 2009-05-29. 
    86. ^ "CDC Inducted into Polio Hall of Fame". CDC In the News. 2009-01-23. http://www.cdc.gov/news/2009/01/polio_hof/. 

    Further reading

    External links



     
    Translations: Polio
    Top

    Dansk (Danish)
    n. - polio

    Nederlands (Dutch)
    kinderverlamming, polio

    Français (French)
    n. - polio, poliomyélite

    Deutsch (German)
    n. - Polio, Kinderlähmung

    Ελληνική (Greek)
    n. - πολιομυελίτιδα

    Italiano (Italian)
    poliomielite

    Português (Portuguese)
    n. - poliomielite (m) (Med.)

    Русский (Russian)
    полиомиелит

    Español (Spanish)
    n. - polio, poliomielitis, parálisis infantil

    Svenska (Swedish)
    n. - polio (förlamning)

    中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
    脊髓灰质炎

    中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
    n. - 脊髓灰質炎

    한국어 (Korean)
    n. - 폴리오, 소아마비

    日本語 (Japanese)
    n. - ポリオ

    العربيه (Arabic)
    ‏(الاسم) شلل أطفال‏

    עברית (Hebrew)
    n. - ‮שיתוק ילדים, פוליו‬


     
     
    Redirected from "Polio"

    Did you mean: poliomyelitis (disease, virus), polio, polio– (gray matter)


     

    Copyrights:

    Medical Encyclopedia. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Neurological Disorder. Gale Encyclopedia of Neurological Disorders. Copyright © 2005 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Sci-Tech Encyclopedia. McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Science and Technology. Copyright © 2005 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Dental Dictionary. Mosby's Dental Dictionary. Copyright © 2004 by Elsevier, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Children's Health Encyclopedia. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Encyclopedia of Public Health. Encyclopedia of Public Health. Copyright © 2002 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
    US History Encyclopedia. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
    Health Dictionary. The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition Edited by E.D. Hirsch, Jr., Joseph F. Kett, and James Trefil. Copyright © 2002 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Veterinary Dictionary. Saunders Comprehensive Veterinary Dictionary 3rd Edition. Copyright © 2007 by D.C. Blood, V.P. Studdert and C.C. Gay, Elsevier. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Essay. History of Science and Technology, edited by Bryan Bunch and Alexander Hellemans. Copyright © 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Poliomyelitis" Read more
    Translations. Copyright © 2007, WizCom Technologies Ltd. All rights reserved.  Read more