Khaleej Times

PCR test detects monkeypox, says WHO

- Staff Reporter sahim@khaleejtim­es.com

At least 20 countries have reported more than 300 confirmed or suspected monkeypox infections. Prior to the recent outbreak, the virus used to be limited to a small and medium group of people. The disease, which was first identified in monkeys, mostly occurs in west and central Africa, and only very occasional­ly spreads elsewhere.

Health authoritie­s in the UAE have reported four cases of the virus so far. The Ministry of Health and Prevention (MOHAP) has also said that infected individual­s would be isolated in hospitals till they recover, while close contacts would need to quarantine at home for 21 days.

How is monkeypox detected?

According to the World Health Organisati­on (WHO), laboratory testing would “enable timely and accurate confirmati­on of infection to support the breaking of chains of transmissi­on, to stop the outbreak”.

Confirmati­on of monkeypox virus infection is based on “nucleic acid amplificat­ion testing (NAAT), using real-time or convention­al polymerase chain reaction (PCR), for detection of unique sequences of viral DNA,” the WHO said.

What samples are collected?

The recommende­d specimen type for laboratory confirmati­on of monkeypox is skin lesion material. These include swabs of lesion surface and/or exudate, roofs from more than one lesion, or lesion crusts.

The samples are then sent for a PCR test. “Two or more swabs should be collected for the highest diagnostic yield,” Dr Shivani Anubhav Chaturvedi, clinical pathologis­t and lab director, Aster Medinova Diagnostic Centre, Bur Dubai, told Khaleej Times earlier.

In the UAE, health facilities are required to immediatel­y report any suspected, potential or confirmed monkeypox cases through the MOHAP’S electronic reporting system for contagious diseases.

How contagious is monkeypox?

Monkeypox is milder compared to Covid-19 and less contagious, according to experts. “Monkeypox is not that contagious, though human to human transmissi­on is possible with low infectivit­y,” a doctor had told Khaleej Times earlier.

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