A zoonotic viral disease caused by the Monkeypox virus (MPXV)
Aetiology
- Causative agent: Monkeypox virus (Orthopoxvirus, Poxviridae family)
- Two genetic clades:
- Clade I (Central African/Congo Basin) – more severe, higher mortality
- Clade II (West African) – milder disease, more common globally
Reservoir: rodents (suspected), monkeys accidental hosts
Transmission
- Animal-to-human:
- Bites, scratches, direct contact with animal blood, fluids, lesions
- Human-to-human:
- Prolonged close contact
- Respiratory droplets
- Contact with skin lesions, scabs, contaminated objects
- Sexual contact (MPXV detected in semen/vaginal fluids)
- Vertical transmission (placenta → possible congenital mpox)
Incubation period: 5–21 days (average 6–13 days)
Clinical Presentation
Prodromal phase (1–5 days before rash):
- Fever
- Headache
- Myalgia
- Chills
- Fatigue
- Lymphadenopathy (key feature distinguishing from smallpox/varicella)
Exanthem phase:
Rash develops in stages over 2–4 weeks:
Macules → Papules → Vesicles → Pustules → Umbilicated lesions → Scabs
- Often begins on face → spreads to body
- Involves palms and soles
- Lesions can be painful/itchy
- Genital/anogenital lesions common in recent outbreaks

Investigations
Clinical findings + epidemiologic history.
Laboratory confirmation:
- PCR from lesion swab (preferred)
- Electron microscopy (orthopox virion)
- Serology possible but cross-reactive with vaccinia/smallpox vaccination
Management
Most cases are self-limiting (recovery in 2–4 weeks).
Supportive therapy:
- Hydration
- Antipyretics
- Pain management
- Prevent secondary infection
Antivirals recommended for severe cases/high-risk individuals:
- Tecovirimat (TPOXX) – first-line
- Cidofovir / Brincidofovir (alternative options)
- VIGIV (Vaccinia Immune Globulin Intravenous) for severe/complicated mpox
Isolation recommended until lesions fully heal and scabs fall off.