Colorado (US):Fears of polio gripped the US in the mid-20th century. Parents were afraid to send their children to birthday parties, public pools or any place where children mingled. Children in wheelchairs served as a stark reminder of the ravages of the disease. To prevent polio outbreaks, government officials used tactics now familiar in the era of COVID-19: They closed public spaces and shut down restaurants, pools and other gathering places.
In 1952, two years prior to the introduction of a trial polio vaccine, there were an estimated 58,000 cases of polio and 3,145 deaths due to polio in the US. These cases included children who were paralysed for life. But those numbers dropped dramatically following a widespread vaccination campaign against polio, beginning in 1955. By the 1970s, there were fewer than 10 cases of paralysis due to polio in the US, and the polio virus was considered eliminated from the US by 1979.
Since then, collective fear of the virus has been mostly lost to history many people alive today are lucky enough not to know someone who has experienced polio. So when news broke in July 2022 that an unvaccinated adult man in New York had contracted polio the first case in the US since 2013 and developed paralysis from the disease, it sent a ripple of fear throughout the public health community and raised the question of whether an old foe was making a comeback.
I am a virologist and a professor of immunology and microbiology and have spent my career both teaching about and doing research on how viruses can cause disease. There is no cure for polio. The only treatment is prevention. And the tool for prevention is vaccination, the same tool that eliminated polio in the US in the first place. Life cycle of the poliovirus Polio or poliomyelitis the disease, is caused by the poliovirus, which is passed from person to person through the mouth.
And while no one would knowingly ingest a virus, touching a contaminated object like a spoon or a glass or accidentally swallowing contaminated water can unknowingly lead to infection. When someone is infected with the poliovirus, they shed the infectious virus in their feces. This is why recent reports that poliovirus has been circulating in New York City wastewater for months and that the virus now has been detected in three New York counties are particularly concerning.
In August 2022, New York State Health Commissioner Mary Basset said that the state health department is treating the single case of polio as just the tip of the iceberg of much greater potential spread. Based on earlier polio outbreaks, she added, New Yorkers should know that for every one case of paralytic polio observed, there may be hundreds of other people infected.
A single case of polio reflects a larger potential spread of the virus because most people infected either don't show any symptoms or have a very mild illness with symptoms similar to the flu. But even without symptoms, an infected person is still excreting virus in their feces, which means they can be a source of infection to others.
The virus, which is very stable in the environment, is easily spread through surface contamination. For this reason, hand-washing is a critical prevention tool. Although many disinfecting agents, such as alcohol or diluted Lysol, fail to inactivate the virus, chlorine bleach does destroy it. This is why public health officials started chlorinating swimming pools decades ago in order to inactivate the polio virus.
Typically, the human body uses stomach acid to protect against ingested viruses. But poliovirus can survive stomach acid to travel to your gastrointestinal tract. There, the virus reproduces itself to establish an infection.
What is paralytic polio? Unfortunately, one person out of about 200 people infected with poliovirus will develop paralysis. Scientists still don't know why one person is susceptible to the paralytic disease while most are not.
In the small subset of people that get paralytic polio, the virus can attack the lower motor neurons found in the brain stem and spinal cord, which are important for controlling muscles. Infection of those neurons leads to the muscle paralysis that is characteristic of paralytic polio. The legs are typically affected often on only one side of the body and paralysis can range from mild to severe. Other muscle groups can also be affected.