Poliovirus can be spread by direct
exposure to an infected individual, and more rarely, by eating foods
contaminated with waste products from the intestines (feces) and/or
droplets of moisture (saliva) from an infected person. Thus, the
major route of transmission is fecal-oral, which occurs primarily
with poor sanitary conditions. The virus is believed to enter the
body through the mouth with primary multiplication occurring in the
lymphoid tissues in the throat, where it can persist for about one
week. During this time, it is absorbed into the blood and lymphatics
from the gastrointestinal tract where it can reside and multiply,
sometimes for as long as 17 weeks. Once absorbed, it is widely
distributed throughout the body until it ultimately reaches the CNS
(the brain and spinal cord). The infection is passed on to others
when poor handwashing allows the virus to remain on the hands after
eating or using the bathroom. Transmission remains possible while
the virus is being excreted and it can be transmitted for as long as
the virus remains in the throat or feces. The incubation period
ranges from three to 21 days, but cases are most infectious from
seven to 10 days before and after the onset of symptoms.
There are two basic patterns to
the virus: the minor illness (abortive type) and the major illness (which
may be paralytic or nonparalytic). The minor illness accounts for
80-90% of clinical infections and is found mostly in young children.
It is mild and does not involve the CNS. Symptoms include a slight
fever, fatigue, headache, sore throat, and vomiting, which generally
develop three to five days after exposure. Recovery from the minor
illness occurs within 24-72 hours. Symptoms of the major illness
usually appear without a previous minor illness and generally affect
older children and adults.
About 10% of people infected with
poliovirus develop severe headache and pain and stiffness of the
neck and back. This is due to an inflammation of the meninges (tissues
which cover the spinal cord and brain). This syndrome is called "aseptic
meningitis." The term "aseptic" is used to differentiate this type
of meningitis from those caused by bacteria. The patient usually
recovers completely from this illness within several days.
About 1% of people infected with
poliovirus develop the most severe form. Some of these patients may
have two to three symptom-free days between the minor illness and
the major illness but the symptoms often appear without any previous
minor illness. Symptoms again include headache and back and neck
pain. The major symptoms, however, are due to invasion of the motor
nerves, which are responsible for movement of the muscles. This
viral invasion causes inflammation, and then destruction of these
nerves. The muscles, therefore, no longer receive any messages from
the brain or spinal cord. The muscles become weak, floppy, and then
totally paralyzed. All muscle tone is lost in the affected limb and
the muscle becomes soft (flaccid). Within a few days, the muscle
will begin to decrease in size (atrophy). The affected muscles may
be on both sides of the body (symmetric paralysis), but are often on
unbalanced parts of the body (asymmetric paralysis). Sensation or
the ability to feel is not affected in these paralyzed limbs.
When poliovirus invades the
brainstem (the stalk of brain which connects the two cerebral
hemispheres with the spinal cord, called bulbar polio), a person may
begin to have trouble breathing and swallowing. If the brainstem is
severely affected, the brain's control of such vital functions as
heart rate and blood pressure may be disturbed. This can lead to
death.
The maximum state of paralysis is
usually reached within just a few days. The remaining, unaffected
nerves then begin the process of attempting to grow branches which
can compensate for the destroyed nerves. Fortunately, the nerve
cells are not always completely destroyed. By the end of a month,
the nerve impulses start to return to the apparently paralyzed
muscle and by the end of six months, recovery is almost complete. If
the nerve cells are completely destroyed, however, paralysis is
permanent.