2.An epidemiological study on vaccine derived polio virus circle in Zhenfeng County of Guizhou Province.
Yi-bing TONG ; Da-yong ZHANG ; Jian ZOU ; Li ZHANG ; Hao YU ; Ming LIU
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2005;39(5):321-323
OBJECTIVETo analyze the event and cause of vaccine derived polio virus (VDPV) circle happened at Yaoshang Village, Wanlan Township, Zhenfeng County, Qianxinan Prefecture, Guizhou Province in August 2004.
METHODSVirus isolation was performed for stool specimens collected from two children cases with acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) reported at Yaoshang Village and 21 normal children under five years old in the same village. And, routine immunization coverage at the Village and AFP incidence and performance of AFP surveillance system in Zhenfeng County were investigated, as well.
RESULTSVaccine derived polio virus 1 (VDPV1) was identified in the feces of two affected children at Yaoshang Village and three other normal children at the same village. Totally, seven cases of AFP have been underreported in Zhenfeng County since 2002. Routine immunization coverage was rather low at Wanlan Township, and nearly nil at Yaoshang Village.
CONCLUSIONSOral polio vaccine (OPV) with attenuated live virus has been used in China for many years to prevent polio. Circulation of VDPV in Zhenfeng County issues a new challenge to eradication of polio. It is necessary to strengthen routine immunization and AFP surveillance to prevent occurrence of VDPV event.
Child, Preschool ; China ; epidemiology ; Feces ; virology ; Humans ; Incidence ; Infant ; Male ; Poliomyelitis ; epidemiology ; transmission ; virology ; Poliovirus ; immunology ; isolation & purification ; Poliovirus Vaccine, Inactivated ; adverse effects ; Poliovirus Vaccine, Oral ; adverse effects
3.Vaccine-associated Paralytic Poliomyelitis: A Case Report of Flaccid Monoparesis after Oral Polio Vaccine.
Sun Jun KIM ; Sung Han KIM ; Young Mee JEE ; Jung Soo KIM
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2007;22(2):362-364
This report describes a case of acute flaccid paralysis after administration of oral polio vaccine (OPV). A 4 month-old male patient with the decreased movement of left lower extremity for 1 month was transferred to the Department of Pediatrics. He received OPV with DTaP at 2 months of age. Flaccid paralysis was detected 4 weeks after OPV immunization. Attempts to isolate Sabin-like viruses in the two stool and CSF samples failed because those specimens were collected more than 2 month after the onset of paralysis. Hypotonic monoparesis (GIV/V), hypotonia and atrophy on the left lower extremity, and ipsilateral claw foot persisted for more than 18 months, while we followed him with rehabilitation therapy. This is the first case of officially approved, recipient vaccine-associated paralytic poliomyelitis in Korea.
Poliovirus Vaccine, Oral/*adverse effects
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Poliomyelitis/*chemically induced/diagnosis/rehabilitation
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Paraplegia/*chemically induced/diagnosis/rehabilitation
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Male
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Infant
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Humans