Symptoms of adult rubella

Update Date: Source: Network

summary

Whether children or adults, in the discovery of disease, should be treated as soon as possible, so that the effect of treatment will be better. Most people in suffering from rubella, will go to the hospital to check their cause, and then according to the cause of disease to choose the appropriate treatment is the most important. Adult rubella symptoms? Next, I'd like to share my views with you.

Symptoms of adult rubella

First, the prodromal period lasted for 1 to 2 days, with mild upper respiratory tract symptoms such as low fever, or moderate fever, headache, loss of appetite, fatigue, cough, sneezing, runny nose, sore throat, conjunctival congestion, occasionally vomiting, diarrhea, epistaxis, gingival swelling, etc,

Second: the rash stage usually occurs 1-2 days after fever. The rash first appears in the face and neck, rapidly expands the trunk and limbs, and covers the whole body within 1 day, but there is no rash on the palms and soles of the feet. The initial appearance of the rash was a fine spot like reddish spot, macular papule or papule with a diameter of 2-3mm.

Third: no rash rubella patients only have fever, upper respiratory tract inflammation, lymph node swelling and pain, but no rash; It can also be infected with rubella virus without any symptoms, signs, serological examination of rubella antibody positive, that is, the so-called subclinical infection or patients. The proportion of patients with dominant infection and patients without rash or latent infection was 1:6-1:9.

matters needing attention

1. Those with obvious symptoms should rest in bed and eat liquid or semi liquid diet. Patients with high fever, headache, cough and conjunctivitis can be treated symptomatically. 2. Immunization is an effective way to prevent rubella. Rubella vaccine is a live attenuated virus strain, which has been used for more than 40 years. More than 95% long-term immunity could be obtained by single dose inoculation, which was close to that induced by natural infection.