By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Health Views OnlineHealth Views OnlineHealth Views Online
  • Health News
    • ALL
    • Global
    • India
    • Insurance
    • Pharma
    • Events
    • Social Campaign
  • E Magazine
    • Celebrating Women in Healthcare March 2025
    • HealthViews Health Magazine Feb 2025
    • Health Magazine 2025 January Edition
    • 2024 Health Tech December Edition
    • Doctor’s Special November Edition
    • September Men Women Health
    • August Mental Health
  • Health Story
    • Health Stories
    • Survivor Story
    • Visual Story
    • Web Stories
  • Health Review
    • Device and Technology
    • Health Policy
    • healthcare facility
    • Medicine and Wellness
    • Organization
    • Products
  • Doctors Profile
  • Features
    • Hospitals and Clinic
    • Technology
    • Wellness
  • Healthcare Awards
  • Health Problems
    • Brain Tumor
    • Cancer
    • Diabetes
    • Mental Health
    • Sleeping Disorders
    • Skin Problems
    • Sexual Health
    • Unhealthy Food
    • Food Chemicals
  • Food
    • Healthy Fruits
    • Healthy Veggies
    • Healthy Herbs
    • Healthy Oil
    • Healthy Spices
    • Millets
    • Dairy Products
  • Healing
    • Allopathy
    • Ayurvedic
    • Alternative Therapy
    • Homeopathy
    • Home Remedies
  • Fitness
  • Health Care
    • Child Care
    • Elderly Care
    • Hair Care
    • Pet Care
    • Skin Care
    • Kids Health
    • Women Health
      • Women Care
      • Pregnancy
    • Men Health
    • LGBTQ health
  • Nutrition
  • Side Effects
  • Animal Health
    • Dog Health
    • Cows Health
  • Myths/Facts
  • Health By Organ
    • Stomach
    • Eye
    • Heart
    • Kidney
    • Lungs
    • Liver
    • Blood Tests
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Health Views OnlineHealth Views Online
Font ResizerAa
  • Health News
    • ALL
    • Global
    • India
    • Insurance
    • Pharma
    • Events
    • Social Campaign
  • E Magazine
    • Celebrating Women in Healthcare March 2025
    • HealthViews Health Magazine Feb 2025
    • Health Magazine 2025 January Edition
    • 2024 Health Tech December Edition
    • Doctor’s Special November Edition
    • September Men Women Health
    • August Mental Health
  • Health Story
    • Health Stories
    • Survivor Story
    • Visual Story
    • Web Stories
  • Health Review
    • Device and Technology
    • Health Policy
    • healthcare facility
    • Medicine and Wellness
    • Organization
    • Products
  • Doctors Profile
  • Features
    • Hospitals and Clinic
    • Technology
    • Wellness
  • Healthcare Awards
  • Health Problems
    • Brain Tumor
    • Cancer
    • Diabetes
    • Mental Health
    • Sleeping Disorders
    • Skin Problems
    • Sexual Health
    • Unhealthy Food
    • Food Chemicals
  • Food
    • Healthy Fruits
    • Healthy Veggies
    • Healthy Herbs
    • Healthy Oil
    • Healthy Spices
    • Millets
    • Dairy Products
  • Healing
    • Allopathy
    • Ayurvedic
    • Alternative Therapy
    • Homeopathy
    • Home Remedies
  • Fitness
  • Health Care
    • Child Care
    • Elderly Care
    • Hair Care
    • Pet Care
    • Skin Care
    • Kids Health
    • Women Health
    • Men Health
    • LGBTQ health
  • Nutrition
  • Side Effects
  • Animal Health
    • Dog Health
    • Cows Health
  • Myths/Facts
  • Health By Organ
    • Stomach
    • Eye
    • Heart
    • Kidney
    • Lungs
    • Liver
    • Blood Tests
Follow US
Home » Monkeypox Q&A: How do you catch it and what are the risks? An expert explains
Health Care

Monkeypox Q&A: How do you catch it and what are the risks? An expert explains

The Conversation
Last updated: February 4, 2025 10:35 am
By The Conversation
7 Min Read
monkeypox symptoms, risk, diagnosis, treatment vaccine

The latest outbreak of monkeypox has, at the time of writing, reached 17 countries with 110 confirmed cases and a further 205 suspected cases. It’s a fast-moving story, so if you need to catch up on the latest, here are answers to some of the most pressing questions.

Contents
How is monkeypox spreading?What are the symptoms?How deadly is monkeypox?Why is it called monkeypox?Is monkeypox related to smallpox and chickenpox?Are cases likely to continue rising?Has monkeypox evolved to be more virulent?How is monkeypox diagnosed?Is there a vaccine for it?Are there drugs to treat it?

How is monkeypox spreading?

The first patient in the current outbreak had returned to the UK from travels to Nigeria where monkeypox is endemic. However, cases are now spreading among people who have not travelled to west or central Africa, suggesting local transmission is occurring.

Monkeypox usually spreads by close contact and respiratory droplets. However, sexual transmission (via semen and/or vaginal fluid) has been posited as an additional possible route. The World Health Organization (WHO) says: “Studies are needed to better understand this risk.”

Most cases in the current outbreak have been in youngish men, but the virus can spread to anyone.

What are the symptoms?

Early symptoms are flu-like, such as a fever, headaches, aching muscles, and swollen lymph nodes.

MONKEY POX SYMPTOMS STAGESi
Image Credit and Attribution UK government, OGL 3 http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3, via Wikimedia Commons

Once the fever breaks, a rash can develop, often beginning on the face and then spreading to other parts of the body – most commonly the palms of the hands and soles of the feet.

How deadly is monkeypox?

Monkeypox is mostly a mild, self-limiting disease lasting two-to-three weeks. However, in some cases, it can cause death. According to the WHO, the fatality rate “in recent times” has been around 3% to 6%. The west African monkeypox virus is considered to be milder than the central African one.

Monkeypox tends to cause more serious disease in people who are immunocompromised – such as those undergoing chemotherapy – and children. There have been no deaths from monkeypox in the current worldwide outbreak, but, according to the Daily Telegraph, one child in the UK is in intensive care with the disease.

Why is it called monkeypox?

Monkeypox was first identified in laboratory monkeys (macaques) in Denmark in 1958, hence the name. However, monkeys don’t seem to be the natural hosts of the virus. It is more commonly found in rats, mice and squirrels. The first case in humans was seen in the 1970s in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Is monkeypox related to smallpox and chickenpox?

Monkeypox is related to smallpox – they are both orthopoxviruses – but it is not related to chickenpox. Despite the name, chickenpox is a herpes virus, not a poxvirus. (How “chicken” got in the name is not entirely clear. In his dictionary of 1755, Samuel Johnson surmised that it is so named because it is “of no very great danger”.) Nevertheless, the vesicles (little pus-filled blisters) caused by monkeypox are similar in appearance to those of chickenpox.

Are cases likely to continue rising?

Cases are likely to continue to rise significantly over the next two-to-three weeks, but this is not another pandemic in the making. Monkeypox doesn’t spread anywhere near as easily as the airborne virus SARS-CoV-2 that causes COVID-19.

Has monkeypox evolved to be more virulent?

RNA viruses, such as SARS-CoV-2, don’t have the ability to check their genetic code for mistakes each time they replicate, so they tend to evolve faster. Monkeypox is a DNA virus, which does have the ability to check itself for genetic mistakes each time it replicates, so it tends to mutate a lot slower.

The first genome sequence of the current outbreak (from a patient in Portugal) suggests that the virus is very similar to the monkeypox strain that was circulating in 2018 and 2019 in the UK, Singapore and Israel. So it is unlikely that the current outbreak is the result of a mutated virus that is better at spreading.

How is monkeypox diagnosed?

In the UK, swab samples taken from the patient are sent to a specialist laboratory that handles rare pathogens, where a PCR test is run to confirm monkeypox. The UK Health Security Agency has only one rare and imported pathogens laboratory.

Is there a vaccine for it?

Vaccines for smallpox, which contain the lab-made vaccinia virus, can protect against monkeypox. However, the vaccine that was used to eradicate smallpox can have severe side-effects, killing around one in a million people vaccinated.

The only vaccine specifically approved for monkeypox, Imvanex, is made by a company called Bavarian Nordic. It uses a nonreplicating form of vaccinia, which causes fewer side-effects. It was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency in 2019 – but only for use in people 18 years of age or older.

UK health secretary Sajid Javid said that the UK government will be stocking up on vaccines that are effective against monkeypox. The UK currently has about 5,000 doses of smallpox vaccine, which has an efficacy of around 85% against monkeypox.

Are there drugs to treat it?

There are no specific drugs to treat monkeypox. However, antivirals such as cidofovir and brincidofovir have been proven to be effective against poxviruses in animals and may also be effective against monkeypox infections in humans.

The post is written by Ed Feil, Professor of Microbial Evolution at The Milner Centre for Evolution, University of Bath

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

For all news and facts related to Health, check out our exclusive section – Health News and Health Facts

upcoming healthcare awards 2024
TAGGED:Health FactsHealth NewsHealthcareMonkeypox

Search Website

GET FEATURED

HEALTHVIEWS-MAGAZINE-INDIA-HEALTH-MAGAZINE

Categories

  • Animal Health
  • Child Care
  • Clinical
  • Device and Technology
  • Doctors Profile
  • Environmental Health
  • Events
  • Features
  • Global
  • Health Care
  • Health News
  • Health Policy
  • Health Policy
  • Health Problems
  • Health Review
  • Health Schemes
  • Health Story
  • healthcare facility
  • Home Remedies
  • Hospitals and Clinic
  • India
  • Insurance
  • LGBTQ Health
  • Medical Myths
  • Medicine and Wellness
  • Men Health
  • Mental Health
  • Natural Healing
  • Nutrition
  • Organization
  • Pharma
  • Pharma
  • Plant Health
  • Products
  • Research
  • Side Effects
  • Social Campaign
  • Survivor Story
  • Technology
  • Uncategorized
  • Wellness
  • Women Health

Tags

Allopathy Alternative Therapy Ayurvedic Better Living Brain Tumor Cancer depression Diabetes Elderly Care Fitness Food Chemicals Food Nutrients Hair Care Healthcare Health Facts Health Magazine Health News Health Program Health Stories Health Warriors Healthy Diet Healthy Food Healthy Fruits Healthy Herbs Healthy Oil Healthy Vegetables Heart homeopathy Home Remedy Hormones Kidney Kids Health men health Mental Health Pet Care Pregnancy Sexual Health Skin Care Skin Problems Sleeping Disorders Stomach Unhealthy Food Weight Loss Women Care yoga

Get Month-Wise All Our Articles Here!

May 2025
M T W T F S S
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031  
« Apr    

Get All Updates on WhatsApp!

Health Views Online WhatsApp Channel

You Might Also Like

Managing-Chronic-Kidney-Disease
FeaturesHealth ProblemsResearch

Managing Chronic Kidney Disease: A Guide to Symptoms, Causes, Diagnosis and Care

By Team
Excess-Sugar-and-Harmful-Effects-on-Organs
Health CareHealth ProblemsSide Effects

What Excess Sugar Does to Your Body, One Organ at a Time

By Team

What are the Health Problems With High Cholesterol Level

By Staff
What are the Common Night Shift Health Problems
Health Problems

What are the Common Night Shift Health Problems

By Staff
Facebook Twitter Youtube Instagram Linkedin
Sitemap
  • Create Doctor Profile
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Health News
  • Health Facts
  • Web Stories
  • Healthcare Awards
  • SIte Map
  • Sitemap XML
  • ROR XML
WhatsApp Channel

© 2024 Health Views Online. All rights reserved. HealthViews Online does not provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?