Pentavalent vaccine

Acombined, pentavalent vaccine is used to protect your child from: diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, polio and a disease caused by the bacterium Hemophilus influenzae type B. This vaccine does not contain any live microorganisms.
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About the vaccine

  • The vaccine contains several antigens: tetanus toxoid, diphtheria toxoid, acellular pertussis (parts of the whooping cough bacterium), inactivated poliomyelitis viruses (three types of virus) and conjugated (tetanus protein bound) Hemophilus influenzae type b vaccine.  It also contains: sucrose, amino acids, aluminum hydroxide as an adjuvant, phenoxyethanol, trometamol, and traces of residues of the production process (neomycin, streptomycin, polymyxin B).
  • It is given according the routine immunization schedule of each country, usually 3 times until the age of 6 months and fourth  dose around the age of 1 year.
  • The vaccine is given by injection into a muscle: in infants into the upper leg and in older children (older than 3 years) into the deltoid muscle of the upper arm.
  • The pentavalent vaccine can be given together with other vaccines: a vaccine against hepatitis B or against a disease caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae, but at a different injection site. Hexavalent vaccines are also used, which contain the hepatitis B vaccine.
  • If your child has not been vaccinated regularly, contact a pediatrician to receive the missing dose of the vaccine.
  • Your child must not get the vaccine if:
    • Reacted to a previous dose of the vaccine with a severe allergic reaction or is allergic to some of the components of the vaccine.
    • The component of whooping cough may not be given if the child  suffers from a progressive disease of the central nervous system (uncontrolled epilepsy, encephalopathy)
  • If your child has an acute illness with a fever, vaccination should be postponed until recovery. The common cold is not a reason to delay vaccination.