Mumps virus
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Mumps virus
- Prodrome followed by parotitis
Microbiology
- Enveloped single-stranded RNA virus in the genus Rubulavirus and family Paramyxovirus
- Only one serotype but 13 genotypes (A to M)
- Genome encodes eight proteins: hemagglutinin-neuraminidase (HN), fusion (F), nucleocapsid (NP), phosphoprotein (P), matrix (M), hydrophobic (SH) and L protein
- P contains V and I proteins
- Irregular spherical shape with nucleocapsid enclosed by a three-layered envelope
- Surface studded with glycoproteins: HN and F, which are the most important for immunity
- Middle layer is lipid bilayer from the host cell
- Inner layer in membrane protein
Epidemiology
- Worldwide distribution
- Epidemics every 2 to 5 years in unimmunized settings, with a peak between January and May
- Spread primarily by schoolchildren
- Outbreaks have happened amongst immunized people, suggesting that a third dose of MMR may be needed to confer ongoing immunity
- Before vaccination, it was the leading cause of viral encephalitis and a common cause of viral meningitis
Pathophysiology
- Acquired through virus (contact, droplet, fomites) entering nose or mouth, with tropism for endo/exocrine glands
- Salivary, pancreatis, testicular
- Less infectious that measles or varicella
- Peak contagion is just before parotitis
- Immune response begins with antibodies against NP protein (S antigen), and may be detectable at presentation, but decline quickly over months
- Antibodies against HN protein (V antigen) follow, peaking at 2 to 4 weeks and persist for years
- IgM antibodies fall within 2 to 6 months
- Neutralizing antibodies to HN and F are detectable during convalescence
Differential Diagnosis
- Infectious parotitis
- Parainfluenza 3 virus, coxsackieviruses, and influenza A
- HIV infection (bilateral, parotid)
- Staph. aureus or GNBs
- Drugs (bilateral, mild)
- Metabolic disorders, including diabetes, malnutrition, cirrhosis, and CKD (bilateral, mild)
- Tumours, cysts, sialolithiasis, and stricture (unilateral)
- Eosinophilic parotitis, often as a drug reaction
Clinical Presentation
- Incubation period of 16 to 18 days (range 2 to 4 weeks)
- One-day prodrome of low-grade fever, anorexia, malaise, and headache
- Earache and parotitis soon follow
- Parotitis progresses over 2 to 3 days, with severe pain
- The other parotid usually follows, but it can be unilateral
- Stensen's duct is edematous and erythematous
- Pain exacerbated by citrus
- Can involve other salivary glands in 10%
- Temperature can be as high as 40º C
- Pain, fever, tenderness resolve, with parotid returning to normal within 1 week
- Can lead to sialectasia resulting in recurrent or chronic sialadenitis
Mumps epididymo-orchitis
- The most common extrasalivary gland manifestation, occuring in 20-30% of postpubertal men (bilateral in 15%)
- Occurs in first 1-2 weeks after parotitis
- Fevers up to 41º C, chills, headache, vomiting, and testicular pain
- Swollen warm testicles with scrotal erythema
- Fever resolves within 5 days, followed by slower resolution of the orchitis
- Tenderness can sometimes last longer than 2 weeks
- Longterm testicular atrophy in 50%
- If unilateral, no concerns
- If bilateral, sterility is rare, and impotence is not a sequela
Mumps oopheritis
- In 5% of cases in postpubertal women
- May cause impaired fertility
Mumps meningitis
- Fever, headache, vomiting, and nuchal rigidity, with an aseptic CSF (lymphocyte-predominant more often than neutrophil-predominant)
- Amylase may be elevated
- Onset usually after parotitis, but can be 1 week before or up to 2 weeks after
- Can also occur without parotitis
- Lasts 3 to 10 days, with complete recovery
Mumps encephalitis
- Non-focal encephalitis, high fever, altered LOC, seizures, paresis, aphasia, and involuntary movements, with an aseptic CSF
- Fever can be up to 41º C
- Can occur concurrent with or up to 10 days after onset of parotitis
- Early-onset is from virus; late-onset is a postinfectious autoimmune demyelinating disease; but there is likely a continuum between these two extremes
- Gradually resolves over 1 to 2 weeks
- Can cause sequelae, including psychomotor retardation, seizures, and death
Other complications
- Cerebellar ataxia, facial palsy, transverse myelitis, Guillain-Barré syndrome, and poliomyelitis-lik syndrome
- Migratory polyarthritis, usually starting 10-14 days after parotitis and lasting up to 5 weeks
- Pancreatitis
- ECG changes with ST depression and T-wave changes, 1st degree heart block
- Myocarditis is rare
Pregnancy
- Pregnant women who are infected have increased risk of spontaneous abortion in the first trimester, as well as low birth weight
- Not clearly related to any significant birth defects
Diagnosis
- Traditionally a clinical diagnosis
- CBC and diff are normal or mild leukopenia; amylase may be up from parotitis, or lipase from pancreatitis
- Can be diagnosed with serology or PCR
- ELISA for IgM, or a fourfold rise from acute to convalescent ELISA or HAI serologies, are diagnostic
- HAI may be affected by parainfluenza
- PCR or culture detectable in saliva, though relatively low level after 5 days; also found in CSF
- Can be detected in urine up to 2 weeks after onset
Management
- Symptomatic
- Immune globulin not helpful
- Post-exposure immunization may not be helpful, though in an outbreak situation, may consider giving an MMR booster
- Isolation for 5 days after onset of parotitis to reduce spread
- Reportable disease, public health may do outbreak investigation and consider booster MMR in high-risk populations
Prevention
- Live attenuated vaccine in the MMR is given at 12-15 months and again at 4-6 years
- Vaccine 65-70% effective, so need high vaccination rate to achieve herd immunity
- Titres positive for at least 10 years, but immunity wanes
- Contraindicated in pregnant women