The Cases of COVID-19 and Measles Co-Infection in Children

Author:

Zvereva N. N.1ORCID,Sayfullin M. A.2ORCID,Samitova E. R.3ORCID,Mazankova L. N.4ORCID,Akimkin V. G.5ORCID,Vasilyeva N. N.3ORCID,Pylaeva E. Y.2ORCID,Romanova Y. V.6ORCID,Rakhalina A. A.6ORCID,Rtischev A. Y.7ORCID,Angel A. E.6ORCID,Shamsheva O. V.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University; National Medical Research Center of Phthisiopulmonology and Infectious Diseases of the Ministry of Healthcare of the Russian Federation

2. Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University

3. Сhildren's City Clinical Hospital n. a. Z.A. Bashlyaeva, Department of Health of Moscow

4. Russian Medical Academy of continuous professional education of the Ministry of Healthcare of the Russian Federation

5. Central Research Institute of Epidemiology of The Federal Service on Customers' Rights Protection and Human Well-being Surveillance

6. Morozovskaya Children's Clinical Hospital of the Moscow Department of Healthcare

7. Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University; Morozovskaya Children's Clinical Hospital of the Moscow Department of Healthcare

Abstract

Relevance. The rapid spread of new pathogens inevitably leads to the occurrence of joint circulation with already known infectious agents, leading to the development of mixed infections. The simultaneous circulation of the pandemic coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 with a highly contagious measles virus leads to the development of mixed infections in people who have not been sick or vaccinated against measles. Aims. Review cases of co-infection with measles and COVID-19 in Moscow. Material and methods. A retrospective study of cases of measles and COVID-19 co-infection in three children with a description of the epidemiological and clinical picture of the disease. Results. In all observed children, the manifestation of the disease was typical for measles, the diagnosis of COVID-19 was established based on a laboratory study carried out in a hospital, which gave reason to count. That the infection with SARSCoV-2 occurred after the infection of children with measles. Conclusions. Different incubation periods can lead to several options for the development of co-infection. The similarity of clinical symptoms at the onset of the disease does not allow excluding a certain infection clinically, without laboratory verification.

Publisher

LLC Numicom

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Epidemiology

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