Table of Contents
What age group gets mumps?
Mumps happens most often in school-age kids and college students. Outbreaks are rare, but can happen. An outbreak is when many people from one area come down with the same disease.
How likely are you to get mumps?
If the contact was brief, the chance of getting mumps is about 10%. People who live with an infected person have up to a 90% chance of getting mumps. A person with mumps can spread it before and after their symptoms start. Mumps can be spread from 3 days before to 9 days after the start of symptoms.
What do mumps look like in adults?
Mumps is characterized by swollen, painful salivary glands in the face, causing the cheeks to puff out. Some people infected with the mumps virus have either no signs or symptoms or very mild ones. When signs and symptoms do develop, they usually appear about two to three weeks after exposure to the virus.
What are the first signs of mumps in adults?
The following are the most common symptoms of mumps that may be seen in both adults and children:
- Discomfort in the salivary glands (in the front of the neck) or the parotid glands (immediately in front of the ears).
- Difficulty chewing.
- Pain and tenderness of the testicles.
- Fever.
- Headache.
- Muscle aches.
- Tiredness.
When do you start to show symptoms of mumps?
Some people infected with the mumps virus have either no signs or symptoms or very mild ones. When signs and symptoms do develop, they usually appear about two to three weeks after exposure to the virus. The primary sign of mumps is swollen salivary glands that cause the cheeks to puff out.
What’s the best way to prevent the mumps?
Mumps Vaccination 1 Protect Your Child with Mumps Vaccine. Mumps vaccine is the best way to decrease your risk of getting mumps. 2 Mumps Outbreaks Still Occur. After the U.S. 3 Paying for Mumps Vaccine. Most health insurance plans cover the cost of vaccines.
Is the mumps still common in the United States?
Mumps can cause swelling in one or both of these glands. Mumps was common in the United States until mumps vaccination became routine. Since then, the number of cases has dropped dramatically. However, mumps outbreaks still occur in the United States, and the number of cases has crept up in recent years.
How does MUMPS spread from person to person?
It’s an infection caused by a virus that’s easily spread through saliva and mucus. It usually happens in kids who haven’t been immunized. Mumps can affect any part of the body, but it mostly affects saliva -making glands below and in front of the ears (called parotid glands). Those glands can swell if infected.