Saturday, April 25, 2015

O951 - Does an attack of acute anterior poliomyelitis confer adequate immunity? Report of four second attacks in New York City in 1935

There've been other reports of reinfection with polio after an initial infection (077), so it seems immunity is not always lifelong or perfect from natural infection.

Fischer and Stillerman collected a number of reports of such second attacks, 13 from others and four of their own in New York City in 1935. These four were in children 3-9 years old, and the attacks all came 2-5 years apart.1

The first had some paralysis in the first attack, recovered, and then had some more in the second and took years longer to recover from that. The second had paralysis the first time but none the second; the infection was nonparalytic. The third had some mild paralysis both times. The fourth had a nonparalytic infection first (it was questionable whether it was even polio), but the second attack was fatal.

So from this and other statistics, the authors calculated that second attacks happen around 2 per thousand first attacks. Considering the low attack rate in the first place, they wonder whether there's actually any immunity to polio at all. But others disagree:
"Fischer and Stillerman have raised the question as to whether the low morbidity rate in poliomyelitis would not make the incidence of second attacks rare even if no immunity occurred following the disease. In the 1935 New York City epidemic they observed four second attacks, a rate of 2 per thousand, which was within the limits of expectancy if no immunity resulted from a previous attack. However, these figures were not based on age specific rates and cannot therefore be taken as final."2

References:
2. Horstmann, D. M. Clinical aspects of acute poliomyelitis. The American Journal of Medicine 6, 592–605 (1949).

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