Dati epidemiologici

Dati epidemiologici

Indietro Clinical Recognition | Monkeypox | Poxvirus | CDC

  • Lesions are firm or rubbery, well-circumscribed, deep-seated, and often develop umbilication (resembles a dot on the top of the lesion)
  • During the current global outbreak:
    • Lesions often occur in the genital and anorectal areas or in the mouth
    • Rash is not always disseminated across many sites on the body
    • Rash may be confined to only a few lesions or only a single lesion
    • Rash does not always appear on palms and soles
  • Rectal symptoms (e.g., purulent or bloody stools, rectal pain, or rectal bleeding) have been frequently reported in the current outbreak
  • Lesions are often described as painful until the healing phase when they become itchy (crusts)
  • Fever and other prodromal symptoms (e.g., chills, lymphadenopathy, malaise, myalgias, or headache) can occur before rash but may occur after rash or not be present at all​
  • Respiratory symptoms (e.g. sore throat, nasal congestion, or cough) can occur

Lesions typically develop simultaneously and evolve together on any given part of the body. The evolution of lesions progresses through four stages—macular, papular, vesicular, to pustular—before scabbing over and desquamation.

The incubation period is 3-17 days. During this time, a person does not have symptoms and may feel fine.

The illness typically lasts 2-4 weeks.

The severity of illness can depend upon the initial health of the individual and the route of exposure. The West African virus genetic group, or clade, which is the clade involved in the current outbreak, is associated with milder disease and fewer deaths than the Congo Basin virus clade.

Entire content available on: https://www.cdc.gov/poxvirus/monkeypox/clinicians/clinical-recognition.html



Lingua

Inglese

Tipologia

Linee guida

Argomento

Gestione Clinica Patologie emergenti Epidemie Monkeypox

Profilo

Salute pubblica

Paese

USA Canada America del sud America centrale Caraibi Medio oriente Sud Pacifico Cina India Indocina Singapore Europa e UK Oceania Africa