## Correct Answer: A. Isolate for 6 days The clinical presentation—fever with headache followed by pleomorphic rash sparing palms and soles—is pathognomonic for **measles**, not varicella. Measles is a highly contagious viral exanthem caused by paramyxovirus, transmitted via respiratory droplets. The rash characteristically appears centrifugally (face → trunk → limbs) and spares palms and soles, distinguishing it from varicella (which affects palms/soles) and other exanthems. In a boys' hostel outbreak, the crowded dormitory setting with close contact facilitates rapid spread. The **period of communicability** for measles extends from 4 days before rash onset to 4 days after rash onset—a total of approximately 8 days, but infectivity is highest during the prodromal phase and first 2–3 days of rash. Standard isolation protocol per Indian guidelines (RNTCP/NTEP and IAP recommendations) mandates **isolation for 6 days from rash onset** to prevent secondary transmission in institutional settings. This is the cornerstone of measles outbreak control in schools and hostels. No antiviral or immunoglobulin is indicated for confirmed or suspected measles cases; supportive care, vitamin A supplementation (especially in malnourished Indian children), and isolation suffice. VZIG is reserved for varicella exposure in immunocompromised or high-risk contacts, not for measles. ## Why the other options are wrong **B. Isolate for 12 days after giving acyclovir, followed by VZIG within 48 hours of exposure** — This conflates measles management with varicella protocol. Acyclovir is the antiviral for varicella, not measles (which is self-limited). The 12-day isolation and VZIG are varicella-specific interventions. Applying varicella management to measles is a classic NBE trap—both are exanthematous viral diseases, but their epidemiology and treatment differ fundamentally. Measles requires only isolation and supportive care. **C. Isolate for 6 days after giving acyclovir, followed by VZIG within 72 hours of exposure** — While the 6-day isolation is correct for measles, the addition of acyclovir and VZIG is inappropriate. This option mixes measles isolation duration (correct) with varicella prophylaxis (incorrect). Measles does not benefit from antivirals or immunoglobulin; these interventions are specific to varicella and would delay appropriate supportive care and vitamin A supplementation in measles cases. **D. Only give VZIG** — VZIG is exclusively for varicella post-exposure prophylaxis in susceptible or immunocompromised contacts within 96 hours of exposure. It has no role in measles management. This option ignores the critical isolation requirement and misidentifies the disease entirely. Isolation is the primary control measure for measles outbreaks in institutional settings per Indian public health guidelines. ## High-Yield Facts - **Measles rash** is pleomorphic, centrifugal (face → trunk → limbs), and characteristically **spares palms and soles**—key discriminator from varicella. - **Period of communicability** for measles: 4 days before rash to 4 days after rash onset; isolation for **6 days from rash onset** is standard per IAP/RNTCP guidelines. - **Vitamin A supplementation** (200,000 IU daily for 2 days, then once more after 2 weeks) is mandatory in Indian measles cases to reduce morbidity and mortality, especially in malnourished children. - **Acyclovir and VZIG** are varicella-specific; measles requires only isolation, supportive care, and vitamin A—no antivirals or immunoglobulins. - **Hostel/school outbreaks** of measles spread rapidly via respiratory droplets; isolation and vaccination of susceptible contacts are primary control measures. ## Mnemonics **MEASLES vs VARICELLA Rash Pattern** **M**easles = **M**issing palms/soles (spares them); **V**aricella = **V**isits palms/soles (involves them). Measles rash is centrifugal; varicella is centripetal. **Measles Isolation Duration** **6 days from rash onset** = standard isolation for measles in India. Remember: 4 days before + 4 days after rash = ~8 days total communicability, but isolation starts at rash and lasts 6 days. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs measles (pleomorphic rash sparing palms/soles) with varicella management options (acyclovir, VZIG, 12-day isolation) to trap students who conflate the two exanthematous diseases. The key discriminator is the rash pattern and the absence of antiviral/immunoglobulin benefit in measles. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian hostels and schools, measles outbreaks spread explosively in unvaccinated or partially vaccinated populations. Early recognition of the rash pattern (sparing palms/soles) and prompt isolation for 6 days, combined with vitamin A supplementation, prevents secondary cases and reduces severe complications like pneumonia and encephalitis—common in malnourished Indian children. _Reference: Park's Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine (Measles epidemiology and control); IAP Guidelines on Immunization; Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine Ch. 219 (Measles)_
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