Uirusu
Online ISSN : 1884-3433
Print ISSN : 0042-6857
ISSN-L : 0042-6857
STUDIES ON RUBELLA
1. EPIDEMIOLOGICAL PATTERN AND SEROEPIDEMIOLOGY OF A RUBELLA OUTBREAK IN TOYAMA PREFECTURE IN 1967
Muneyuki MATSUDAKoji KATORIMitsue MIYAHARAKumiko MATSUURAKentaro KUBOTA
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1974 Volume 24 Issue 1 Pages 8-19

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Abstract
An epidemic of rubella occurred in Toyama Prefecture in early spring in 1967. A prefecturewide hospital surveilance indicated that the epidemic was mainly localized in the south-westernpart of the prefecture, with Fukumitsu town as its center, that the peak age of the patients was 6 to 7, and that 18 of 22 patients over 20 years of age were female. Fever, whole body skin eruption, and swelling of the cervical lymph node appeared in 72.1%, 68.9%, and 41.6%, respectively, of the patients. Virological and seroepidemiological studies gave the following results.
1. Six strains of rubella virus were isolated from the throat swab and or blood of 5 patients consisting of 1 primary schoolchild, 3 junior-high-school boys, and 1 adult.
2. In patients with clinical manifestations, HI antibody response to rubella virus was rapid. The titer being 1:512 only 4 days after the onset of the disease.
3. After the epidemic, the antibody level was still very low (between ×8 and ×256) among nursery schoolchildren. It became higher with the advance in age. More than a half of the adults examined showed an intermediate antibody level (between ×8 and ×256).
4. Before the epidemic, 2 distinct patterns were observed in different districts with regard to the antibody level in various age groups. On antibody was detected from 2 age groups, 10 to 11 and 2 to 3.
5. The antibody level in adults after the epidemic was much higher than that before the outbreak.
6. Adults whose family member was infected with rubella virus showed a significantly higher peak in the distribution of antibody titers than those whose family member had not been infected with the virus. This may indicate the possibility that adults possessing a relatively low antibody level may have been reinfected with the virus or at least got a booster response to the virus.
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© The Japanese Society for Virology
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