mpox

viral disease
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Also known as: monkeypox
Formerly known as:
monkeypox
Top Questions

What is mpox?

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Is there a vaccine for mpox?

mpox, viral disease of animals, particularly certain rodents and primates, including monkeys and humans, that causes symptoms similar to those of smallpox, though less severe. Mpox is caused by the monkeypox virus, a member of the same virus family that causes smallpox and cowpox. Monkeypox virus is classified as either clade I or clade II. Clade I, which is endemic to Central Africa, causes more severe illness and is deadlier than clade II, which is dominant in West Africa.

Discovery and transmission of infection

Mpox was first identified in laboratory monkeys in 1958 (its original source remains unknown); in 1970, the disease was documented in humans for the first time. The virus is usually found in primates and rodents in Central and West Africa, where infection has been espeically dangerous in children, who have had a mortality rate as high as 10 percent in some outbreaks. In addition, the monkeypox virus has been brought out of Africa in infected “exotic pets,” such as giant pouched rats, brush-tailed porcupines, and rope squirrels. In the United States, captive prairie dogs infected by imported African pets have passed the virus to humans. Infected animals may display fever, rashes, swollen lymph nodes, eye discharge, and general listlessness.

The monkeypox virus can be transmitted to humans through an animal bite or through direct contact with infected bodily fluids. It can also be transmitted from person to person through prolonged close contact, usually among family members; exposure to respiratory droplets may be another route of transmission.

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Symptoms, treatment, and vaccination

In humans mpox becomes apparent about two weeks after infection, with the onset of fever, headache, general malaise and fatigue, and swollen lymph nodes. A few days later a rash of raised bumps appears on the face and body. These eventually crust and fall off, and the disease runs its course in two to four weeks.

Treatment is limited to alleviating symptoms. Outbreaks are contained by isolating patients and by observing strict hygiene around them. Infection can be prevented by vaccination with Jynneos (Imvanex, or Imvamune), an attenuated live virus vaccine. The smallpox vaccine ACAM2000 also provides some protection against the monkeypox virus; inoculation with smallpox vaccine may help protect individuals likely to be exposed to the monkeypox virus, including veterinarians and other animal handlers.

Notable outbreaks

During the period of intense smallpox vaccination in the 20th century, outbreaks of mpox were rare, isolated, and brief. Since the eradication of smallpox and the cessation of worldwide smallpox vaccination in 1980, however, mpox outbreaks in countries in Central and West Africa, particularly the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC; Congo-Kinshasa) in Central Africa, have become larger and more prolonged, and the virus has shown an increased tendency to be spread directly by humans.

One of the first outbreaks to occur outside of Africa was a 2003 outbreak in the United States, which involved transmission of the virus to a child by a captive prairie dog near Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The outbreak ultimately resulted in 71 cases of illness and was traced back to Gambian pouched rats imported from Ghana. From 2018 to 2021, small numbers of cases were reported in the United Kingdom, the United States, and Singapore; in each of these instances, the index case was an individual who had recently traveled out of Nigeria.

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In 2022 a more severe outbreak emerged, involving extensive human-to-human transmission in countries outside of Africa. The outbreak began in May 2022 in the United Kingdom and spread widely in the following months, reaching countries in Africa, Asia, Australia, and the Americas. By late July, with nearly 18,600 cases having been reported, the outbreak was declared a Public Health Emergency of International Concern by the World Health Organization (WHO). The emergency was officially declared over by May 2023, as cases had slowed significantly; by the end of that year, some 99,518 cases and 207 deaths associated with the outbreak had been reported globally.

In 2024, mpox again began to spread rapidly in the DRC, this time involving an especially deadly strain of clade I virus. On August 14, following the spread of mpox to nearby previously unaffected African countries, WHO declared the outbreak a global health emergency. By that time, the DRC alone had reported approximately 14,000 cases and 511 deaths.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Kara Rogers.