Pediatrics

Measles, Mumps, Rubella, and Chickenpox

The Classic Viral Exanthems

Common Pediatric Diseases and Disorders

In the pre-vaccine era, these four diseases were considered inevitable rites of passage for childhood. Every parent expected their child to get them. Fast forward to today, and many pediatricians in developed countries have never seen a case of measles or rubella. Yet these diseases haven't disappeared—they're merely controlled by one of medicine's greatest achievements: vaccines. When vaccination rates drop, these "forgotten" diseases roar back with a vengeance, as recent measles outbreaks worldwide have proven.

🔴 Measles (Rubeola): The Most Contagious Disease Known

Measles is so contagious that if one person has it, 90% of nearby unvaccinated people will catch it. It spreads through the air—you can catch it by simply walking into a room two hours after an infected person left. Before the vaccine, measles infected 3-4 million Americans yearly, causing 48,000 hospitalizations and 400-500 deaths.

🤒 The Clinical Journey: A Predictable Timeline

Incubation Period (10-14 days)

The child is infected but shows no symptoms. Contagious from 4 days before rash to 4 days after rash appears.

Prodrome Phase (2-4 days): The "3 Cs"

  • Cough: Harsh, barking cough
  • Coryza: Severe runny nose
  • Conjunctivitis: Red, watery eyes with photophobia
  • Plus high fever (often 40-40.6°C/104-105°F)
High-Yield Pearl: When you see the 3 Cs with high fever, think measles before the rash even appears.

The Pathognomonic Sign: Koplik Spots

On day 2-3 of the prodrome, before the rash appears, look inside the mouth. On the buccal mucosa (inner cheeks) opposite the molars, you'll see tiny white spots on a red base—like "grains of salt on a red background." These are Koplik spots, and they're diagnostic of measles!

The Catch: They only last 12-24 hours and disappear as the rash appears. If you see them, you've caught measles early.

Exanthem Phase (Day 3-5): The Rash

The rash appears on day 3-5 of illness, starting at the hairline and behind the ears, then spreading downward over 3-4 days: face → neck → trunk → arms → legs.

Rash Characteristics:
  • Erythematous (red) maculopapular (flat and raised)
  • Blanches with pressure (initially)
  • Becomes confluent (merges together), especially on face and upper body
  • Starts to fade after 3-4 days in the same order it appeared
  • Leaves brownish discoloration and fine desquamation (peeling)
Key Feature: The child is MOST contagious during the prodrome, before anyone knows it's measles. By the time the rash appears, they've already exposed everyone.

⚠️ Complications: Why Measles Kills

Measles isn't just a rash. It temporarily suppresses the immune system for weeks to months after infection, making children vulnerable to other infections.

Common Complications (30% of cases)

  • Otitis media (ear infection): 7-9%
  • Pneumonia: 1-6% (most common cause of measles death in children)
  • Diarrhea: 8%
  • Post-infectious encephalitis: 1 in 1,000

Rare But Devastating

Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis (SSPE):

  • Occurs 7-10 years after measles infection
  • Incidence: 1 in 10,000 cases (higher in infants: 1 in 1,700)
  • Progressive neurological deterioration
  • No effective treatment
  • Invariably fatal within 1-3 years of onset

💊 Treatment & Prevention

Treatment

There's No Specific Antiviral Treatment. Management is supportive:

  • Hydration
  • Fever control
  • Nutrition
  • Treat secondary bacterial infections
  • Isolation to prevent spread
Vitamin A Supplementation—Evidence-Based Intervention

WHO recommends Vitamin A for all children with measles:

  • 6-11 months: 100,000 IU once, repeat next day
  • Over 12 months: 200,000 IU once, repeat next day

Benefits: Reduces measles mortality by 50% and reduces complications.

Prevention: The MMR Vaccine

Schedule:

  • First dose: 12-15 months
  • Second dose: 4-6 years

Efficacy: 97% effective after two doses

Post-Exposure Prophylaxis

If exposed to measles:

  • Unvaccinated, age-appropriate: Give MMR within 72 hours
  • Infants 6-11 months, immunocompromised, pregnant: Give immunoglobulin (IG) within 6 days

🐿️ Mumps: The Chipmunk Disease

Mumps is caused by a paramyxovirus that has a predilection for glandular and neural tissue. Before the vaccine, mumps was the leading cause of viral meningitis and acquired deafness in children.

🤕 Clinical Presentation

Incubation & Prodrome

  • Incubation: 16-18 days (range: 12-25 days)
  • Prodrome (1-2 days):
  • Fever, headache, malaise
  • Myalgia (muscle aches)
  • Anorexia (loss of appetite)

Classic Mumps: Parotitis

Bilateral parotid gland swelling (70-80% of symptomatic cases):

  • Starts unilaterally, becomes bilateral in 75% within days
  • Swelling obscures the angle of the jaw
  • Earlobe is pushed upward and outward
  • Pain when chewing or with sour foods
  • Lasts 7-10 days
High-Yield Pearl: Not all cases have parotitis! Up to 30% of infections are asymptomatic or present with only non-specific symptoms.

⚠️ Complications: Beyond the Cheeks

Common Complications

  • Orchitis: 20-30% of post-pubertal males
  • Oophoritis: 5% of post-pubertal females
  • Aseptic Meningitis: 1-10% of cases
  • Pancreatitis: 4% of cases

Serious Complications

  • Encephalitis: 1 in 6,000 cases
  • Deafness: 1 in 20,000 cases
  • Usually unilateral
  • Can be permanent

🔴 Rubella (German Measles): Mild Disease, Devastating Consequences

Rubella is mild—so mild that 25-50% of infections are asymptomatic. But don't be fooled. Rubella's danger lies not in what it does to children, but in what it does to unborn babies.

👶 Clinical Presentation in Children

Incubation & Prodrome

  • Incubation: 14-21 days
  • Prodrome (1-5 days, often absent):
  • Low-grade fever
  • Mild malaise
  • Lymphadenopathy (especially posterior auricular, posterior cervical, suboccipital)

The Rash

  • Appears on face first, spreads downward rapidly
  • Pink, maculopapular
  • Discrete (doesn't coalesce like measles)
  • Fades in same order it appeared
  • Gone within 3 days (hence "3-day measles")
Key Distinguishing Feature: Prominent lymphadenopathy, especially behind the ears and at the back of the neck, often appears BEFORE the rash and is the most consistent finding.

🚨 Congenital Rubella Syndrome (CRS): The Real Tragedy

When a pregnant woman contracts rubella, especially in the first trimester, the consequences for the fetus can be catastrophic.

Risk by Trimester

  • First 12 weeks: 85% chance of fetal defects
  • 13-16 weeks: 50% chance
  • After 20 weeks: Rare

Classic Triad of CRS

  1. Cardiac defects: Patent ductus arteriosus, pulmonary artery stenosis
  2. Eye defects: Cataracts, glaucoma, retinopathy
  3. Deafness: Sensorineural hearing loss

The Tragedy: These defects are permanent and preventable with vaccination.

🔴 Chickenpox (Varicella): The Itchy Nightmare

Before the varicella vaccine (introduced 1995), chickenpox was a universal childhood experience, causing 4 million cases, 11,000 hospitalizations, and 100 deaths annually in the US alone.

🦠 The Varicella-Zoster Virus (VZV)

VZV is a herpesvirus with a sneaky strategy: after primary infection (chickenpox), it hides dormant in dorsal root ganglia. Decades later, when immunity wanes, it can reactivate as shingles (herpes zoster).

🔍 Clinical Presentation

Incubation & Prodrome

  • Incubation: 10-21 days (average 14-16 days)
  • Prodrome (1-2 days):
  • Low-grade fever
  • Malaise, headache
  • Anorexia

The Rash: A Diagnostic Delight

Chickenpox has the most distinctive rash in pediatrics. Once you see it, you'll never forget it.

Rash Progression

  1. Starts on face/scalp, then spreads to trunk (centripetal distribution)
  2. Individual lesions evolve: Macule → Papule → Vesicle → Pustule → Crust
  3. "Dew drop on a rose petal": Clear vesicle on erythematous base
  4. Intensely pruritic (itchy!)
  5. Appears in crops over 3-5 days

Pathognomonic Feature

"Lesions in different stages"—you'll see macules, papules, vesicles, and crusts all at the same time. This doesn't happen with other viral exanthems!

⚠️ Complications & Treatment

Common Complications

  • Secondary bacterial skin infection (most common)
  • Scarring (from scratching)
  • Dehydration (oral lesions make eating/drinking painful)

Serious Complications

  • Bacterial superinfection
  • Pneumonia (1-2% of adult cases)
  • Cerebellar ataxia (1 in 4,000 cases)
  • Encephalitis (1-2 per 10,000 cases)

Reye's Syndrome—The Aspirin Connection

In the 1970s-80s, researchers linked aspirin use during varicella (and influenza) to Reye's syndrome: acute encephalopathy with fatty liver degeneration. Mortality: 30-40%.

Critical Rule: NEVER give aspirin to children with varicella or influenza-like illness!

Acyclovir—The Controversy

Acyclovir modestly reduces symptoms if started within 24 hours of rash onset.

AAP Recommendations: NOT routinely recommended for healthy children under 12. Consider for adolescents, secondary household cases, chronic conditions, or immunocompromised.

💉 The MMR and Varicella Vaccines: Addressing Concerns

🛡️ Safety Profile

These vaccines are among the safest medical interventions available:

Common Side Effects

  • Fever (5-15%)
  • Mild rash (5%)
  • Injection site reaction
  • Transient lymphadenopathy

Rare Side Effects

  • Febrile seizures (1 in 3,000-4,000)
  • Thrombocytopenia (1 in 30,000)
  • Anaphylaxis (extremely rare: 1 in 1,000,000)

🚫 The Autism Myth

The Wakefield Fraud

In 1998, Andrew Wakefield published a now-retracted paper linking MMR to autism. It was fraudulent, manipulated data, and has been thoroughly debunked.

The Evidence

Dozens of large studies involving millions of children have found NO link between vaccines and autism. Wakefield lost his medical license.

The Tragedy: The anti-vaccine movement sparked by this fraud has led to declining vaccination rates and resurgent outbreaks of measles, mumps, and pertussis worldwide.

👥 Herd Immunity

Vaccines protect not just the vaccinated child but the community:

  • Infants too young to be vaccinated
  • Immunocompromised individuals who can't receive live vaccines
  • The small percentage of vaccinated individuals who don't develop immunity

Measles threshold: 95% population immunity needed to prevent outbreaks

Mumps threshold: 88-90%

When vaccination rates drop below these thresholds, outbreaks occur.

📊 Comparing the Four: Key Distinctions

📈 Disease Comparison Table

Feature Measles Mumps Rubella Chickenpox
Rash Start Hairline/face No rash Face Face/trunk
Rash Spread Downward N/A Rapid downward Centripetal
Rash Duration 5-6 days N/A 3 days 5-7 days
Pathognomonic Sign Koplik spots Parotid swelling Posterior nodes Lesions in different stages
Fever Very high Moderate Low-grade Low-moderate
Contagiousness (R0) Extremely (12-18) Moderate (4-7) Moderate (5-7) High (10-12)
Main Danger Pneumonia, encephalitis, SSPE Orchitis, meningitis, deafness Congenital syndrome Bacterial superinfection
Vaccine Efficacy (2 doses) 97% 88% 97% 90%

R0 = Basic reproduction number (average number of people infected by one case)

💎 Clinical Pearls

💡 Essential Knowledge Points

  • "3 Cs before you see": Cough, coryza, conjunctivitis predict measles before the rash.
  • Koplik spots are diagnostic but transient. If you see them, you've caught measles early.
  • Posterior cervical/auricular lymphadenopathy is the hallmark of rubella, often appearing before the rash.
  • Mumps can present without parotitis. Think mumps in aseptic meningitis or orchitis even without swollen cheeks.
  • Lesions in different stages = chickenpox. No other exanthem does this.
  • "Dew drop on a rose petal" is the classic description of varicella vesicles.
  • Vitamin A for measles reduces mortality by 50% in high-risk children.
  • Never give aspirin in chickenpox (Reye's syndrome risk).
  • Rubella is mild in children, devastating in pregnancy. Always ensure women are immune before conception.
  • Breakthrough chickenpox after vaccination is mild: fewer lesions, mostly maculopapular, shorter duration.
  • Post-exposure prophylaxis works: Vaccine within 3-5 days (chickenpox, measles) or immune globulin within 6-10 days.

🎯 The Bottom Line

These four diseases—once universal childhood experiences—are now largely preventable through vaccination. Measles, mumps, and rubella are controlled to the point that many physicians have never seen them, but falling vaccination rates threaten this achievement. Chickenpox, while generally mild, can cause severe complications in high-risk groups. The MMR and varicella vaccines are safe, effective, and have saved countless lives. As future healthcare providers, we must not only recognize these diseases but also be strong advocates for vaccination, the most powerful preventive tool in pediatrics.