Poliomyelitis

Author:

Mehndiratta Man Mohan1,Mehndiratta Prachi2,Pande Renuka3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology, Janakpuri Superspeciality Hospital, Janakpuri, New Delhi, India

2. Department of Neurology, subspecialty division Vascular neurology-StrokeDepartment of Neurology, subspecialty division Vascular neurology-Stroke, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, USA

3. Department of Microbiology, Janakpuri Superspeciality Hospital, New Delhi, India

Abstract

Poliomyelitis is a highly infectious disease caused by a virus belonging to the Picornaviridae family. It finds a mention even in ancient Egyptian paintings and carvings. The clinical features are varied ranging from mild cases of respiratory illness, gastroenteritis, and malaise to severe forms of paralysis. These have been categorized into inapparent infection without symptoms, mild illness (abortive poliomyelitis), aseptic meningitis (nonparalytic poliomyelitis), and paralytic poliomyelitis. This disease has been associated with crippling deformities affecting thousands of lives throughout the world. Only due to the perseverance and determination of great scientists in 1900s, the genomic structure of the virus and its pathogenesis could be elucidated. Contribution of Salk and Sabin in the form of vaccines—oral polio vaccine (OPV) and the inactivated polio vaccine—heralded a scientific revolution. In 1994, the World Health Organization (WHO) Region of The Americas was certified polio free followed by the WHO Western Pacific Region in 2000 and the WHO European Region in June 2002 of the 3 types of wild poliovirus (types 1, 2, and 3). In 2013, only 3 countries remained polio endemic—Nigeria, Pakistan, and Afghanistan. Global eradication of polio is imperative else the threat of an outbreak will hover forever. Today, all the governments of the world in collaboration with WHO stand unified in their fight against poliomyelitis and the task when achieved will pave the way for eliminating other infections in future.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Clinical Neurology

Reference20 articles.

1. Daniel TM, Robbins FC, eds. A history of poliomyelitis. Polio. Rochester, New York: University of Rochester Press; 1997:5–22.

2. Current status of poliovirus infections

3. The Spatial Dynamics of Poliomyelitis in the United States: From Epidemic Emergence to Vaccine-Induced Retreat, 1910–1971

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