10 Facts About The Monkey Pox Virus - Benue State University Gist

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Friday, 1 September 2017

10 Facts About The Monkey Pox Virus




Residents of Bayelsa state have been gripped by fear following after the outbreak of a rare deadly viral disease known as Monkey Pox in the state.

The state commissioner for health, Professor Ebitimitula Etebu has since confirmed the development.

Monkeypox is a rare disease that occurs primarily in remote parts of Central and West Africa, near tropical rain forests.

The Center for Disease Control and Prevention has listed the major facts about the disease.


1. Double stranded DNA virus (Zoonotic)

Family poxviridae, Genus orthopoxvirus

Family of pox viruses includes other viruses like chicken pox or the eradicated small pox.

2. History

1958: First identified in laboratory monkey kept for research

1970: First human case was identified in DR Congo

1985: First isolation in nature, in an ailing rope squirrel in DR Congo

2003: First human infection outside Africa documented in USA

3. Transmission

From infected animals or humans

Following contact with body fluids/materials of animals or infected humans


Following bite, scratch or even bush meat preparation

Entry via broken skin or mucosa (skin, respiratory tract, mucus membrane eye, nose, mouth).

Shared utensils, bed, room etc increase risk of transmission

4. Incubation period

7-14 days commonly but could extend from 5 to 21 days.

5. Signs and symptoms

Similar to small pox but milder

Fever, chills, drenching night sweats, headache

Muscles aches (backache), Exhaustion-Lymph-nodes swell up (absent in small pox)

6. Case definition

A: Designed to detect single cases followed by immediate response and control efforts.

- Fever followed by rash (vesicular/pustular) with rash on palm, soles and face or 5 various-like scars


B: Designed for use in the context of disease surveillance to elaborate on burden in endemic areas

- Individual with vesicular/pustular eruptions with at least one of the symptoms: fever preceding eruptions, lymphadenopathy and/or pustules/crust on the palms of the hands or sole of the feet

7. After 1-10 days

Centrifugal rash: Rash macule-papule-vesicles-pustules-umbilical-then crusted (scab)

8. Case fatality

-1-10% die from this infection

9. Prevention

Small pox vaccine (for at risk workers) which can be given up to 14 days post exposure

Hygiene (Hand washing) with soap and water or alcohol based sanitizer

Avoid ill or dead animals’ suspects or their materials

Isolation of suspects or identified cases

Use personal protective equipment when caring for patients (for health workers)

10. Treatment and vaccine

There are no specific treatments or vaccines available for monkeypox infection, but outbreaks can be controlled. Vaccination against smallpox has been proven to be 85% effective in preventing monkeypox in the past but the vaccine is no longer available to the general public after it was discontinued following global smallpox eradication.

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