Rubella

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What is Rubella?

Rubella is a contagious infection in which there is a rash on the skin.



Alternative names

Three day measles; German measles



Causes

The disease is caused by a virus that is spread through the air or by close contact. A person can transmit the disease from 1 week before the rash begins, until 1 - 2 weeks after the rash disappears. The disease is less contagious than rubeola (measles). After an infection, people have immunity to the disease for the rest of their lives. In children and adults, rubella is usually mild and may even go unnoticed. Risk factors include: Not being vaccinated against rubella Exposure to a...



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What is Rubella?

Rubella is a contagious infection in which there is a rash on the skin.

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Alternative names

Three day measles; German measles

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Causes

The disease is caused by a virus that is spread through the air or by close contact.

A person can transmit the disease from 1 week before the rash begins, until 1 - 2 weeks after the rash disappears. The disease is less contagious than rubeola (measles). After an infection, people have immunity to the disease for the rest of their lives.

In children and adults, rubella is usually mild and may even go unnoticed.

Risk factors include:

  • Not being vaccinated against rubella
  • Exposure to an active rubella virus
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Symptoms & Signs

Children generally have few symptoms. Adults may experience a fever, headache, general discomfort (malaise), and a runny nose before the rash appears. They may not notice the symptoms.

Other symptoms may include:

  • Bruising (rare)
  • Inflammation of the eyes (bloodshot eyes)
  • Muscle or joint pain
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Exams and Tests

  • Nasal or throat swab for viral culture
  • Rubella serology
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Treatments

There is no treatment for this disease.

Patients can take acetaminophen to reduce fever.

Defects that occur with congenital rubella syndrome can be treated.

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Prognosis

Rubella is usually a mild infection.

However, if a mother is infected during early pregnancy, rubella can cause defects in the developing baby. The unborn baby can develop congenital rubella syndrome, which typically has a poor outcome. Defects are rare if the infection occurs after the 20th week of pregnancy.

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Possible Complications

Complications that can occur in the unborn baby:

A miscarriage or stillbirth may occur.

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When to contact a medical professional

Call for an appointment with your health care provider if:

  • You are a woman of childbearing age and are unsure of whether you have been vaccinated against rubella
  • You or your child develop a severe headache, stiff neck, earache, or vision problems during or after a case of rubella
  • You or your child need to receive MMR immunization (vaccine)
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Prevention

There is a safe and effective vaccine to prevent rubella. The rubella vaccine is recommended for all children. It is routinely given when children are 12 - 15 months old, but is sometimes given earlier during epidemics. A second vaccination (booster) is routinely given to children ages 4 - 6. MMR is a combination vaccine that protects against measles, mumps, and rubella.

Women of childbearing age usually have a blood test to see if they have immunity to rubella. If they are not immune, women should avoid getting pregnant for 28 days after receiving the vaccine.

Those who should not get vaccinated include:

  • Women who are pregnant
  • Anyone whose immune system is affected by cancer, corticosteroid medications, or radiation treatment.

Great care is taken not to give the vaccine to a woman who is already pregnant. However, in the rare instances when pregnant women have been vaccinated, no problems have been detected in the infants.

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References

Weisberg SS. Vaccine preventable diseases: current perspectives in historical context. Dis Mon. 2007;53:467-528.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Recommended Immunization Schedule for Ages 7 - 18 Years. United States. 2009.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Recommended Immunization Schedule for Adults. United States. 2009.

Content provided by:

A.D.A.M., Inc. is accredited by URAC, also known as the American Accreditation HealthCare Commission (www.urac.org). URAC's accreditation program is an independent audit to verify that A.D.A.M. follows rigorous standards of quality and accountability. A.D.A.M. is among the first to achieve this important distinction for online health information and services. Learn more about A.D.A.M.'s editorial policy, editorial process and privacy policy. A.D.A.M. is also a founding member of Hi-Ethics and subscribes to the principles of the Health on the Net Foundation (www.hon.ch). The information provided herein should not be used during any medical emergency or for the diagnosis or treatment of any medical condition. A licensed medical professional should be consulted for diagnosis and treatment of any and all medical conditions. Call 911 for all medical emergencies. Links to other sites are provided for information only -- they do not constitute endorsements of those other sites. © 1997- 2008 A.D.A.M., Inc. Any duplication or distribution of the information contained herein is strictly prohibited.

Review Date: .3/14/2009

Reviewed By: Neil K. Kaneshiro, MD, MHA, Clinical Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, University of Washington School of Medicine. Also reviewed by David Zieve, MD, MHA, Medical Director, A.D.A.M., Inc.3/14/2009

Rubella Videos

Rubella Articles

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Conversations On Rubella

  • Circumcision??


    • Posted On June 6, 2008 01:04:16 PM

      ..., why did I get all those vaccinations, rubella would have been badass. Read More

    • Posted On May 27, 2008 11:32:01 AM

      [color=#4080FF:1jy0l1t6]My son is 18 days old today and I am debating as to whether or not he should be circumcised. He had a consultation with the urologist this morning who made it clear that a c... Read More

  • using hand weights


    • Posted On January 16, 2009 09:16:09 AM

      ...nes take care of (measles, chicken pox, rubella, etc), death from dehydration from diarrheas, infections that antibiotics wipe out, bacteria in watersupply, handwashing, etc... then perhaps this... Read More

    • Posted On January 15, 2009 04:59:41 PM

      I think many people (especially women) underestimate the size of hand weights they should be using. Today I took my kids to Sports Authority to buy some new ones. I have an 11 yo boy (6th grade) ... Read More

  • cross post about Autism and vaccines

     Unraveling the history of the vaccine-autism scare Every parent should read this. You can also read the article this is referring to, facts and evidence can help your child. http://arste...

    • Posted On May 30, 2009 11:14:54 AM

      ...hen they did tests they found traces of rubella in the disgestive track (I believe that is what it said).  So it seems like there may be something of a correlation between Autism and MMR bu... Read More

    • Posted On May 28, 2009 08:39:28 AM

      I asked a pediatrician about the correlation between autism and vaccines and she said there have been many studies that show no connection.  She said the 1 study that put everyone in fear... Read More

Rubella Blogs

Sri Lanka begins immunization of displaced Tamil children

ReliefWeb reports that the Sri Lankan Health Ministry has deployed staff and drugs necessary to immunize over 40,000 displaced children currently residing in refugee camps in the Wanni (Vanni) region. The children will also be vaccinated against Polio...

Review & Tidbits: The Vaccine Narrative

Joseph Heller’s “ The Vaccine Narrative ” examines both the history of and the stories we tell about vaccines in the United States, focusing on diphtheria, rubella, pertussis, and HIV. A number of aspects of this book held my interest...

SPOTLIGHT: Autism parents focused on alleged vaccine link

While no one has found clinical evidence to support the notion, a large number of parents of autistic children believe that childhood vaccines had a role in their children developing the disease. In fact, national support groups have all but officially...

NY Attorney General Questions Insurer's Health Care Ranking Methodology

NY State attorney general Andrew Cuomo has come out against the use of claims data for ranking doctors. In letters to Aetna and Cigna, Cuomo questioned the insurers' use of claims data to rank specialists. According to Cuomo, claims data does not contain...

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Talk

MileyCNichols: Anna blamed Cheetah's for the gene that causes rubella to leave permanent spots on people's skin which is untrue & she knew it

MileyCNichols: Linda & Lisa cover for gays when it means rubella spotted skin so all th meanings of things r changed here to where it has no meaning but no

MileyCNichols: & have deals for pedophile lighters to play children so it would seem that the US beat the rubella diseases like german measles

mawahlund: Knock Knock-Who is it? RUBELLA!

_rawranne: the baby is better. Back to his smiley self. He had roseola and my mom said he had rubella which is contagious and i freaked out. Lol.



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