Monkeypox
- May 29, 2022
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Monkeypox
- Monkeypox was first reported in 1958 in laboratory monkeys and the first human case was reported in 1970 in a nine month old baby in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
- Nigeria reported its first case of monkeypox in humans in 1970 when one case was detected; there were two human cases of monkeypox in Nigeria in 1978.
- And after nearly four decades of not reporting any cases, monkeypox (West African clade) made a re-emergence in Nigeria in September 2017 with a total of 558 cases reported till now.
Spread:
- Based on epidemiological and clinical characteristics of 122 confirmed or probable cases of human monkeypox cases in Nigeria, researchers found both primary zoonotic and human to human transmission.
- Like all diseases that are endemic only to Africa, while efforts were made to prevent an outbreak in the non-endemic countries outside Africa, no serious international attempts were made to stop the outbreak in Nigeria nor study the virus characteristics.
- The current outbreak in Europe and North America is the first instance when large scale human to human transmission has been reported outside Africa.
- There are no clear answers to how humans are infected as the host animal that behaves as a reservoir for the virus has not been identified in the wild. And how the virus spreads from animals to humans is not known.
- The current outbreak appears to have spread primarily among men who have sex with men.
- The virus is not transmitted through semen or vaginal fluids but the skin to skin contact during sex can result in virus spread.
Low mutation rate
- Till date over 15 monkeypox genomes have been sequenced. But the monkeypox virus has a lower mutation rate (about two mutations a year) compared to nearly 25 mutations in a year in the case of SARS CoV2 virus.
- This is because monkeypox is a DNA virus unlike the SARSCoV2, which is an RNA virus.
- It is yet unclear if the virus has acquired the ability of sustained transmission among humans.