0521779407-18 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:20
Rubella 1315
■generally mild disease with minimal morbidity and mortality
(EXCEPT congenital infections; see complications below)
■lymphadenopathy common – suboccipital/posterior auricular no-
des or generalized, precedes rash by 5–10 days
■exanthem appears on face first and spreads centrifugal pattern
■rash is usually erythematous, maculopapular, discrete
■adolescent – facial rash may be confused with acne
■in adult – exanthem frequently pruritic
■rash may NOT be present (up to half may not have rash)
■joint involvement: women more than men (usually athralgic, some-
times arthritis)
■fever variable, mild if present
■occasional features; palatal petechiae, mild pharyngitis, conjunctivi-
tis,
■in utero infection may result in abortion, stillbirth and congenital
anomalies
tests
Nonspecific:
■Low WBC, thrombocytopenia can occur
Specific:
For postnatal: best method is serology
■Single serum IgM (however note false positive can occur)
■4-fold or greater change titer IgG
■EIA most available (IFA, CF, HI or neutralizing antibody) for acute
and/or convalescent titers.
■Viral isolation is possible but not practical – nasal/throat specimens
(notify lab that rubella is suspected)
For congenital;
■best method – viral isolation urine and respiratory secretions (feces
and CSF may also be suitable specimens)
differential diagnosis
■For postnatal infection;
➣Measles; rash generally more erythematous in measles than
rubella
➣Scarlet fever; rash in Scarlet fever often spares the face
➣Infectious mononucleosis (especially when ampicillin is given)
➣Enterovirus; seasonality may be helpful
■For congenital:
➣Other TORCH agents-serology/viral isolation to distinguish