If you visited the South Plainfield Sky Zone Trampoline Park at 600 Hadley Road on the afternoon of April 22 or the River 978 Banquet Hall at 978 River Ave. in Lakewood on the night of April 23 you may have been exposed to measles, according to the state Department of Health.

A New Yorker with a confirmed case of the virus visited both locations, according to the DOH. The department is warning anyone who visited Sky Zone from noon to 5 p.m. April 22 or the banquet hall from 6 p.m. April 23 to 1 a.m. April 24 that they may have been exposed.

"Anyone who suspects an exposure is urged to call a health care provider before going to a medical office or emergency department," the department's statement read. "Special arrangements can be made for evaluation while also protecting other patients and medical staff from possible infection."

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Anyone who may have contracted the virus in this most recent incident may not develop symptoms until as late as May 14, according to the DOH.

On April 22, the DOH announced that a Middlesex County resident with "a highly suspect case of measles" had visited Rosalita's Roadside Cantina on Route 9 in Marlboro on April 19. The DOH later issued an update, advising that the possible carrier had also visited a Manalapan LabCorp diagnostic center on April 17 and 19.

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Though frequently mild, and typically presenting with fever, rash, cough and red eyes, measles can also kill those it infects, and does so approximately 100,000 times worldwide every year, usually in patients younger than 5, according to the Mayo Clinic.

Severe cases of the virus can also cause hearing loss, brain swelling, mental problems and premature birth, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The virus can spread rapidly and is airborne, most commonly affecting unvaccinated people.

As of April 23 the DOH had confirmed 14 cases of measles statewide, including eight in Ocean County and four in Monmouth County.

Outbreaks in Rockland County and Brooklyn, New York, have helped push the total number of measles cases to at least 704 across 22 states as of April 26, according to the CDC. That's the highest number of measles cases in any given calendar year since 1994, before the virus was declared eliminated in the U.S. in 2000, according to the CDC.

The vaccination for measles, mumps and rubella, when taken in two doses, is 97 percent effective, according to the CDC. Even a single dose is 93 percent effective.

Alex N. Gecan: @GeeksterTweets; 732-643-4043; agecan@gannettnj.com