Zürcher Nachrichten - Monkeypox: a rare disease with low fatality rates

EUR -
AED 4.077633
AFN 79.486192
ALL 99.714985
AMD 434.006208
ANG 1.987409
AOA 1018.01254
ARS 1191.078219
AUD 1.745335
AWG 2.001055
AZN 1.891224
BAM 1.964587
BBD 2.241239
BDT 134.873171
BGN 1.962365
BHD 0.418478
BIF 3298.728352
BMD 1.110155
BND 1.483213
BOB 7.670477
BRL 6.245511
BSD 1.110025
BTN 94.756348
BWP 15.361932
BYN 3.632561
BYR 21759.040826
BZD 2.22969
CAD 1.564425
CDF 3187.255307
CHF 0.953873
CLF 0.027513
CLP 1055.602124
CNY 8.068719
CNH 8.110327
COP 4608.531542
CRC 559.280461
CUC 1.110155
CUP 29.419111
CVE 110.76338
CZK 24.968509
DJF 197.682764
DKK 7.460997
DOP 70.102481
DZD 147.771513
EGP 56.188392
ERN 16.652327
ETB 146.129365
FJD 2.584275
FKP 0.855616
GBP 0.841992
GEL 3.063903
GGP 0.855616
GHS 17.206184
GIP 0.855616
GMD 80.12889
GNF 9603.708944
GTQ 8.547442
GYD 232.9098
HKD 8.634586
HNL 28.417651
HRK 7.539393
HTG 144.300244
HUF 408.272916
IDR 18558.094024
ILS 4.09433
IMP 0.855616
INR 94.866089
IQD 1451.875237
IRR 46737.72757
ISK 146.990957
JEP 0.855616
JMD 172.972861
JOD 0.787083
JPY 162.173727
KES 143.469837
KGS 96.238968
KHR 4440.368479
KMF 502.51411
KPW 999.199623
KRW 1623.390499
KWD 0.342288
KYD 0.92319
KZT 558.237528
LAK 24055.377874
LBP 99429.804802
LKR 326.955971
LRD 222.022541
LSL 20.829671
LTL 3.277999
LVL 0.671522
LYD 5.362273
MAD 10.64531
MDL 19.840608
MGA 5121.092065
MKD 63.145975
MMK 2330.71961
MNT 3878.280698
MOP 8.899364
MRU 44.190223
MUR 50.804448
MVR 17.142963
MWK 1925.052543
MXN 22.239298
MYR 4.944356
MZN 70.926795
NAD 20.829671
NGN 1704.25413
NIO 40.849852
NOK 11.423674
NPR 151.856893
NZD 1.904816
OMR 0.427382
PAB 1.110155
PEN 4.078903
PGK 4.536059
PHP 63.376753
PKR 310.974815
PLN 4.258728
PYG 8849.87458
QAR 4.040779
RON 5.084752
RSD 119.695688
RUB 93.522266
RWF 1577.006059
SAR 4.163346
SBD 9.435826
SCR 16.057717
SDG 666.058497
SEK 10.721634
SGD 1.489848
SHP 0.872408
SLE 25.344689
SLL 23279.399498
SOS 633.342907
SRD 40.654627
STD 22977.97009
SVC 9.713816
SYP 14435.015956
SZL 20.829671
THB 37.866262
TJS 12.108077
TMT 3.882918
TND 3.434299
TOP 2.673928
TRY 42.114435
TTD 7.506836
TWD 36.771587
TZS 2938.103827
UAH 45.876809
UGX 4047.462435
USD 1.110155
UYU 46.898282
UZS 14366.79616
VES 77.497595
VND 28496.360995
VUV 137.181198
WST 3.144884
XAF 670.018813
XAG 0.034268
XAU 0.000359
XCD 3.005515
XDR 0.835831
XOF 670.018813
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.993358
ZAR 20.949927
ZMK 9992.731774
ZMW 31.121897
ZWL 357.469503
  • BCC

    -6.6500

    95.42

    -6.97%

  • CMSC

    -0.2800

    22.22

    -1.26%

  • RIO

    -0.9100

    58.99

    -1.54%

  • SCS

    -0.6250

    10.835

    -5.77%

  • NGG

    3.6950

    69.475

    +5.32%

  • AZN

    2.4750

    74.695

    +3.31%

  • BCE

    0.4100

    22.23

    +1.84%

  • JRI

    -0.1620

    12.878

    -1.26%

  • CMSD

    -0.2500

    22.58

    -1.11%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    9.8

    +0.2%

  • RELX

    0.6500

    51.63

    +1.26%

  • VOD

    0.2650

    9.385

    +2.82%

  • RBGPF

    -0.2800

    67.72

    -0.41%

  • BTI

    1.5100

    41.76

    +3.62%

  • GSK

    1.0850

    38.725

    +2.8%

  • BP

    -2.3750

    31.435

    -7.56%

Advertisement Image
Monkeypox: a rare disease with low fatality rates
Monkeypox: a rare disease with low fatality rates / Photo: CHARLES BOUESSEL - AFP/File

Monkeypox: a rare disease with low fatality rates

Several cases of monkeypox have been detected in North America and Europe since early May, sparking concern that the disease, endemic in parts of Africa, is spreading.

Advertisement Image

Text size:

Most people recover within several weeks and monkeypox has only been fatal in rare cases.

There have been thousands of human infections in parts of Central and Western Africa in recent years but it is rare in Europe and North America.

France declared its first case on Friday.

- What is monkeypox? -

Monkeypox is a virus transmitted to humans from animals, with symptoms very similar to smallpox but less severe clinically.

In Africa, monkeypox has been found in many animals including rope squirrels, tree squirrels, Gambian poached rats, dormice as well as different species of monkeys and others.

The World Health Organization however says human-to-human transmission is limited.

Symptoms in humans of monkeypox include lesions, eruptions on the face, palms or soles, scabs, fever, muscle ache and chills.

Human monkeypox was first identified in 1970 in Zaire, now the Democratic Republic of Congo, in a nine-year-old boy in a region where smallpox had been eliminated two years earlier.

Since 1970, human cases of monkeypox have been reported in 11 African countries – Benin, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of Congo, Gabon, Ivory Coast, Liberia, Nigeria, Republic of Congo, Sierra Leone and South Sudan, according to WHO.

In the spring of 2003, cases were also confirmed in the United States -- the first time the disease surfaced outside Africa.

- How is it transmitted? -

Animal-to-human transmission can happen as a result of direct contact with the blood, bodily fluids, or cutaneous or mucosal lesions of infected animals.

Secondary or human-to-human transmission can happen through close contact with respiratory secretions, skin lesions of an infected person or recently contaminated objects.

Transmission via droplet respiratory particles usually requires prolonged face-to-face contact, putting health workers, family members and other close contacts of infected people at greater risk.

On Monday, the WHO signalled that some of the cases confirmed recently in Britain surfaced among gay men.

But experts have warned it was too premature to establish a link.

"Although the current cluster of cases is in men who have sex with men, it is probably too early to make conclusions about the mode of transmission or assume that sexual activity was necessary for transmission, unless we have clear epidemiological data and analysis," Michael Skinner, a virology specialist from London's Imperial College, told Science Media centre(SMC) website.

- How serious is it? -

It is usually a self-limited disease with symptoms lasting from two to four weeks.

Severe cases occur more commonly among children and are related to the extent of virus exposure, patient health status and nature of complications.

The case-fatality ratio has varied but has remained between 0 and 10 percent in all registered infections.

"It’s been estimated that the West Africa strain, which the UK cases have, has a mortality rate of about one percent. There is also a strain found in the Congo region which can be fatal in as many as 10 percent of cases, but the UK cases do not have this strain," Simon Clarke, associate professor in cellular microbiology at the University of Reading, told SMC.

- Is there a treatment? -

There is no specific treatment but vaccination against smallpox has been found to be about 85 percent effective in preventing monkeypox.

However access to smallpox vaccines is now limited as the disease has been eradicated globally.

"The good news is the smallpox vaccine works well against monkeypox. The bad news is mostly people under age 45 don’t have the smallpox vaccine," said epidemiologist and health economist Eric Feigl-Ding.

O.Hofer--NZN

Advertisement Image