Children in South Carolina are developing rare brain swelling complications after measles outbreak - ALPHA MAG

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Children in South Carolina are developing rare brain swelling complications after measles outbreak

Children in South Carolina are developing rare brain swelling complications after measles outbreak

South Carolinachildren who havecontracted cases of the measles virusin recent months have also been affected by a worrying and sometimes deadly complication, the state's epidemiologist said Wednesday.

The Independent US

Some have developed an inflammatory brain condition known asencephalitis, which refers to swelling in the brain that can cause seizures, intellectual disability or even death.

It's unknown how many children have encephalitis, but Dr. Linda Belltold reportersthat any time people develop theknown complication of measles"there can be long-term consequences, things like developmental delay and impacts on the neurologic system that can be irreversible."

"We want to prevent this potential complication in anyone," she said.

The majority of the state's876 casesare in children, including 233 under the age of five years old and 555 between the ages of five and 17, according to data from the South Carolina Department of Public Health released Tuesday.

More than 200 of the state's 876 measles cases are children under the age of five, health officials say (Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Encephalitis usually occurs within 30 days days of an initial measles infection. Among children who get measles encephalitis, 10 to 15 percent die, according toWired.

And, encephalitis isn't the only complication health authorities have seen due to infections.

Bell noted that there had been cases of pneumonia — a leading cause of child deaths around the world — as well as 19 hospitalizations for complications related to measles in South Carolina since the outbreak's start in October.

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"These are complications we hope to prevent, and increasing vaccination coverage protects those who cannot be vaccinated like young infants, pregnant women and those with weakened immune systems," she said.

The majority — a whopping 95 percent — of cases are in unvaccinated individuals. That's a trend that's been seen in other outbreaks across the country since last year, though South Carolina's is now the largest since another sickened hundreds in West Texas.

The measles-mumps-rubella vaccine offers lifelong protection for 97 percent of people who receive two doses, which is how the U.S. eliminated the highly infectious measles virus in 2000.

A mother and daughter read together at a vaccine clinic in West Texas last year. Cases in South Carolina have since exceeded those reported in the Lone Star State's outbreak (Getty Images)

But, rising vaccine hesitancy and misinformation has left communities unprotected, doctors say.

"There's also a misconception that measles is just a routine childhood infection, that it's not consequential," Stanford Medicine's Dr. Sruti Nadimpalli explained in astatement. "In reality, it suppresses the immune system and the potential complications are very serious, including severe debility and death."

In the Palmetto State, however, the tide is starting to turn.

Bell said there had been a strong increase in vaccinations last month: the largest since the beginning of the outbreak.

"No vaccine offers 100 percent protection against infection, but the MMR vaccine is one of the most effective vaccines in preventing infection," she said.