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Liberia issues alert on monkey pox outbreak

Monkeys

Monkeys, Web photo

Liberian health authorities issued an alert on the possible outbreak of monkeypox, an infectious disease which is found mostly in central and western Africa.

Liberia’s chief medical officer Francis Kateh said the disease, caused by the monkeypox virus, has already
been discovered in the southern county of River Cess.

Kateh said there are currently four confirmed cases of the disease. A couple of suspected cases have also
been sent for testing.

According to the health official, the time from exposure to the onset of symptoms of monkeypox is around 10 days, while the duration of symptoms is typically from two to five weeks.

He said the virus may be spread from handling bushmeat, an animal bite or scratch, body fluids, contaminated
objects or close contact with an infected person.

The monkeypox was first identified in 1958, amongst laboratory monkeys.

The first human cases were discovered in 1970 in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Fever, itchy toes, headache, muscle pain, and swollen lymph nodes, among others, have been identified as the
symptoms of the disease.

The disease is not deadly and can be cured through the smallpox vaccine.

In 2017, west African country Nigeria recorded 172 suspected and 61 confirmed cases of the monkeypox
disease between September and December.

 

(NAN)

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