The Japanese Committee for the National Registry of Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis (SSPE) confirmed that 215 cases of SSPE occurred in the 20 years from 1966 to 1985, as discovered in the 10-year surveillance from April 1976 through March 1986. The annual incidence in recent years has been between 10 and 23 cases. Among cases with a certain history of measles illness or measles vaccination, 184 (90.2%) had a history of measles illness without receiving measles vaccine. There were 11 probable measles vaccine-associated cases (5.4%), three (1.5%) being vaccinated with a combined use of killed and live vaccine and eight (3.9%) with further attenuated live vaccine. There were nine cases (4.4%) without a history of either measles illness or measles vaccination. Intervals between measles illness and the onset of SSPE varied from 1 to 16 years (mean, 7.0 years). The periods following measles vaccination with further attenuated live vaccine were 2 to 11 years (mean, 4.6 years). Annual incidence rates of SSPE per million cases of measles ranged between 6.1 and 40.9 (mean, 16.1) in the 10 measles epidemic years 1968-1977, and those following vaccination with further attenuated live vaccine were zero in most years and at the highest 3.08 (mean, 0.9) per million doses of distributed vaccine.
Doxapram hydrochloride, a respiratory stimulant, has several undesirable side effects during high-dose administration, including second-degree atrioventricular (AV) block and QT prolongation. In Japan, this drug is contraindicated for newborn infants. Recent studies, however, have demonstrated the efficacy and safety of doxapram therapy for apnea of prematurity (AOP) using lower doses than those previously tested. As a result, approximately 60% of Japanese neonatologists continue to use this drug. This study used surface ECG recordings to assess the cardiac safety of low-dose doxapram hydrochloride (0.2 mg/kg/h) in fifteen premature very-low-birth-weight infants with idiopathic AOP. Cardiac intervals and number of apnea episodes were compared before and after drug administration. Low-dose doxapram hydrochloride resulted in approximately 90% reduction in the frequency of apnea without side effects. None of the infants developed QT or PR prolongation, arrhythmia, or other conduction disorders. In addition, there was no change in the slope of QT/RR before versus after administration of doxapram hydrochloride. We conclude that low-dose administration of doxapram hydrochloride did not have any undesirable effects on myocardial depolarization and repolarization.
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