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Medical Health Encyclopedia
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Smallpox lesions
Smallpox lesions


Smallpox

Alternative Names:
Variola - major and minor; Variola

Treatment:

If the smallpox vaccination is given within 1-4 days of exposure to the disease, it may prevent illness, or at least lessen the degree of illness associated with the disease. Treatment, once the disease symptoms have started, is limited.

Text Continues Below



There is no agent that has been specifically made for treating smallpox. Sometimes antibiotics are given for secondary infections that may occur. Vaccinia immune globulin (antibodies against a disease similar to smallpox) may help shorten the disease.

If a diagnosis of smallpox were made, exposed persons would need to be isolated immediately. The isolation would include not just the person who contracted the disease, but all other face-to-face contacts with that person.

These individuals would need the vaccine and need to be monitored. Emergency measures to protect a broader segment of the population would have to be implemented immediately, within the recommended guidelines from the CDC and other federal and local health agencies.



Expectations (prognosis):

In the past, this was a major illness with significant mortality as high as 30%.



Complications:
  • Bacterial infections at the skin at the sites of the lesions
  • Pitted scars from pustules
  • Arthritis and bone infections
  • Pneumonia
  • Severe bleeding
  • Eye infections
  • Brain inflammation (encephalitis)
  • Death


Calling your health care provider:

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