U.S. Urges Smallpox Vaccine for Monkeypox
Exposure
Reuters Health
By Andrew Stern
Wednesday, June 11, 2003
CHICAGO (Reuters) - U.S. health authorities on Wednesday recommended smallpox
vaccinations for anyone exposed to "monkeypox" either from infected pets or from
the roughly 63 human cases, all but one in the U.S. Midwest.
The U.S. government also banned the importation or trade of African rodents,
including Gambian rats believed to be the original source of the smallpox-like
illness previously unseen in the Western Hemisphere, said David Fleming, deputy
director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.
"I'm confident that everything that can be done is being done to prevent the
spread of this virus," Fleming told reporters, citing efforts to track down and
euthanize infected animals.
The source of the illness was believed to be a shipment of Gambian rats from
Africa to Texas that later infected prairie dogs native to the U.S. Plains. Both
species are part of a growing trade in so-called exotic pets.
Some infected animals were sold to an Illinois distributor, and the virus has
been spread to pet shops, pet brokers and pet owners via formal and informal
sales in Wisconsin, Indiana and Illinois. Some states quickly declared bans on
trade in the animals.
State health departments have reported 29 confirmed or suspected cases in
Indiana, 21 in Wisconsin, 12 in Illinois and one sickened boy in New Jersey who
apparently contracted the illness on a recent visit to the Midwest.
While monkeypox is not as harmful as smallpox, authorities fear a sickened
animal, which displays cold-like symptoms, such as a runny nose and eyes plus a
rash, might escape or be discarded into the wild and spread the virus to
squirrels or other species. One pet rabbit exposed to a prairie dog was
infected.
VACCINE CAN BE DANGEROUS
The smallpox vaccine has been found to be roughly 85 percent effective in
warding off monkeypox in humans, which kills between 1 percent and 10 percent of
its victims in the rain forests of central and western Africa, Fleming said.
The CDC recommended that local public health authorities vaccinate health
investigators, veterinary staff, relatives of monkeypox victims, and others who
believed they were exposed to the virus as long as two weeks ago.
"We need to be prepared for the fact that monkeypox can be a fatal disease,"
Fleming said. "We are recommending smallpox vaccine for a limited number of
people -- we feel the risk is sufficient to warrant recommending it, (even) for
pregnant women and children."
The vaccine, which has been stockpiled in recent months because of a
perceived bioterror threat, is potentially dangerous for some recipients -- a
few people in every million can be expected to die from the vaccine. The recent
limited vaccination program has produced some unforeseen side effects, including
21 people who have suffered inflammation of the heart or a membrane around the
heart.
There is no treatment for monkeypox, which usually runs its course within two
weeks after causing flu-like symptoms and pus-filled blisters on the body. There
has been no evidence to date of human-to-human transmission in the United
States, although it does occur in Africa.
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-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
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