The Detection of Monkeypox in Humans in the Western Hemisphere

Kurt D. Reed(Marshfield Clinic), John W. Melski(Marshfield Clinic), Mary Beth Graham(Medical College of Wisconsin), Russell L. Regnery(Office of the Director), Mark J. Sotir(Epidemic Intelligence Service), Mark V. Wegner(Wisconsin Division of Public Health), James J. Kazmierczak(Wisconsin Division of Public Health), Erik J. Stratman(Marshfield Clinic), Yu Li, Janet A. Fairley(Medical College of Wisconsin), Geoffrey Swain(Medical College of Wisconsin), Victoria A. Olson(Office of the Director), Elizabeth K. Sargent(Office of the Director), Sue C. Kehl(Medical College of Wisconsin), Michael Frace(Office of the Director), Richard L. Kline(Office of the Director), Seth Foldy(Medical College of Wisconsin), Jeffrey P. Davis(Wisconsin Division of Public Health), Inger K. Damon(Office of the Director)
New England Journal of Medicine
January 21, 2004
Cited by 1,108Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: During May and June 2003, an outbreak of febrile illness with vesiculopustular eruptions occurred among persons in the midwestern United States who had had contact with ill pet prairie dogs obtained through a common distributor. Zoonotic transmission of a bacterial or viral pathogen was suspected. METHODS: We reviewed medical records, conducted interviews and examinations, and collected blood and tissue samples for analysis from 11 patients and one prairie dog. Histopathological and electron-microscopical examinations, microbiologic cultures, and molecular assays were performed to identify the etiologic agent. RESULTS: The initial Wisconsin cases evaluated in this outbreak occurred in five males and six females ranging in age from 3 to 43 years. All patients reported having direct contact with ill prairie dogs before experiencing a febrile illness with skin eruptions. We found immunohistochemical or ultrastructural evidence of poxvirus infection in skin-lesion tissue from four patients. Monkeypox virus was recovered in cell cultures of seven samples from patients and from the prairie dog. The virus was identified by detection of monkeypox-specific DNA sequences in tissues or isolates from six patients and the prairie dog. Epidemiologic investigation suggested that the prairie dogs had been exposed to at least one species of rodent recently imported into the United States from West Africa. CONCLUSIONS: Our investigation documents the isolation and identification of monkeypox virus from humans in the Western Hemisphere. Infection of humans was associated with direct contact with ill prairie dogs that were being kept or sold as pets.


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