It was first reported in
monkeys maintained in a laboratory for research in 1958. The first human
infection of it was reported in 1970 when a nine-month old child from
Democratic Republic of Congo, was infected. Nigeria too reported a monkeypox
infection in humans in 1970 and two more in 1978.
For almost four decades
thereafter, there was no reporting of monkeypox. But in 2017 it re-emerged in
Nigeria. Between September 2017 and April 30, 2022, it has reported 558 cases.
Among them, 231 have been confirmed by laboratory. Since then, dozens of cases
were reported from Nigeria year after year.
Based on the clinical
examination of confirmed cases from Nigeria during 2017-2018, researchers have
found that the virus transmits primarily from an infected animal or from an infected
person. Transmission from animal to man occurs through broken skin or through
direct contact with an infected animal’s blood, bodily fluids, or pox lesions.
Man to man transmission occurs when one comes in contact with the sores, sobs,
respiratory droplets or oral fluids of an infected person. One may even pick it
up by coming into contact with recently contaminated clothing, bedding and
other clothes used by an infected person.
Bill Hanage, Associate Professor
of epidemiology from Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, commented that
many early cases were noticed among gay or bisexual men, and people with
multiple sexual partners. There is however no evidence to indicate that the
virus transmits through semen or vaginal fluids. It is believed that it is the
skin-to-skin contact during sex that might have resulted in the virus spread.
Epidemiologists say that it may
take several days to a few weeks for an infected person to develop symptoms.
Early signs of infection may look-like flu-like symptoms: fever, chills,
headache, muscle aches, fatigue, and swollen lymph nodes. After a few days, a
rash often develops. Rash may start as flat, red-bumps and they may be painful.
Later, these bumps may turn into blisters which fill with pus. Over a period of
two to four weeks, the blisters may crust over and fall off. One may also get
sores in mouth, vagina or anus.
In the current outbreak of the disease, it is noticed that all the infected persons need not necessarily develop all these symptoms. Some may have relatively few blisters than what is normally expected. With the result, there is a likelihood of misdiagnosing it as other infectious disease. Here the danger is the infected man though not showing any symptoms could still transmit the virus to others. Of course, the rate of spread of the disease by an infected person is still not known. It is only with the spread of the disease from Africa to Europe and North America, that researchers have noticed large-scale human-to-human transmission.
But what is most intriguing
about this disease is: while monkeypox outbreak was noticed in Nigeria as early
as in 2017 and subsequently dozens of cases were reported from time to time, no
international attempt was made to stop the outbreak in Nigeria, nor did any
agency paid requisite attention to research the disease till the latest
outbreak in Europe and North America,. Even to date, the host animal of the
virus that acts as its reservoir is not known. In the light of this, African
scientists’ accusation that till wealthy countries are effected by the disease,
no one had paid attention to study the disease and its spread sounds true.
For, it’s only after the
disease was spread to Europe and America that the researchers from Portugal
uploaded the first draft genome of the monkeypox virus detected in the country.
But as Gustavo Palacios, virologist from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai,
commented, more work needs to be done to draw definitive conclusions about the
disease. All that the researchers are saying today based on the preliminary
genetic data is that the virus found in Portugal is related to a viral clad
that was predominantly found in West Africa, which was found to cause milder
disease with a lower death rate of 1% in rural population.
Of course, it is still not
known for certain if this is the same strain that is causing concern across
England and North America. True, currently genome sequencing is being carried
out actively, and till date 15 genomes are reported to have been sequenced. And
theoretically. this being a DNA virus, mutation rate would not be that alarming
as in the case of RNA-virus. However, nothing is still known about its mutation
rate for certain. So, what is needed is more research to know about its source
animal and causes under the current occurrence of the disease in the hitherto
non-endemic countries.
Despite the fact that the
current spread of the monkeypox disease is commented by virologists as an
“eye-opening” kind, scientists believe that it would fizzle-out on its own: it
will not spread that easily between people and there is a vaccine to prevent it
and it is easily noticed when somebody’s got it. They say it would not
certainly become a pandemic. Let us join them in that hope but keeping
ourselves well informed about the latest findings about the disease.
That said, we must also remember
that once a new disease is noticed—be it in Africa or elsewhere—threatening
mankind, it is incumbent upon the rich nations to show solidarity by undertaking
requisite research for its control….. For, it is a matter of a few months for a new disease to spread to the rest of the world from its place of origin.....
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