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Monkeypox/ Mpox- Here is everything you should know

Here is everything you should know about Monkeypox, also known as Mpox. This comes as a case was recently confirmed in Gauteng. 

Let’s look at everything you need to know about Monkeypox, also known as Mpox. 

This comes as a case of monkeypox monkeypox disease was recently confirmed in Gauteng. 

Also read: Confirmed case of monkeypox disease in Gauteng

According to the Minister of Health, Joe Phaahla, the case involves a 35-year-old male who resides in Gauteng and tested positive on 9 May 2024.

“The case was first tested by Lancet Laboratory, which was later confirmed by the National Institute for Communicable Diseases (NICD) and immediately notified the department.” 

Phaahla urged the public to be vigilant. 

“Mpox is a rare viral infectious disease in humans caused by the monkeypox virus (MPXV).” 

He said that although the virus is not highly transmissible from person to person, it has increased in global public health significance and can cause a painful rash, enlarged lymph nodes, and fever. 

According to the department, most people fully recover, but some get very sick.

The preliminary investigation and case findings report show that the patient has no recent travel history to countries experiencing an outbreak of the disease. 

Anyone can get mpox. It spreads from contact with infected:

  • persons, through touch, kissing, or sex
  • animals, when hunting, skinning, or cooking them
  • materials, such as contaminated sheets, clothes or needles 
  • pregnant persons, who may pass the virus on to their unborn baby. 

Here are the symptoms: 

Mpox causes signs and symptoms, which usually begin within a week but can start 1–21 days after exposure. Symptoms typically last 2–4 weeks but may last longer in someone with a weakened immune system.

Common symptoms of mpox are:

  • rash
  • fever
  • sore throat
  • headache
  • muscle aches
  • back pain
  • low energy
  • swollen lymph nodes. 

For some people, the first symptom of mpox is a rash, while others may have different symptoms first. 

The rash begins as a flat sore which develops into a blister filled with liquid and may be itchy or painful. As the rash heals, the lesions dry up, crust over and fall off. 

Some people may have one or a few skin lesions, and others may have hundreds or more. These can appear  anywhere on the body, such as:

  • palms of hands and soles of feet
  • face, mouth and throat
  • groin and genital areas
  • anus.

Some people also have painful swelling of their rectum or pain and difficulty when peeing.

People with mpox are infectious and can pass the disease on to others until all sores have healed and a new layer of skin has formed. 

Children, pregnant people and people with weak immune systems are at risk for complications from mpox.

Typically for mpox, fever, muscle aches and sore throat appear first. The mpox rash begins on the face and spreads over the body, extending to the palms of the hands and soles of the feet and evolves over 2-4 weeks in stages – macules, papules, vesicles, pustules. Lesions dip in the centre before crusting over. 

Scabs then fall off. Lymphadenopathy (swollen lymph nodes) is a classic feature of mpox. Some people can be infected without developing any symptoms.

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