Houston Chronicle Sunday

Monkeypox symptoms stumping doctors

- By Apoorva Mandavilli

Early in the monkeypox outbreak, a man in his 20s arrived at an emergency department in Northern California, tiny blisters on his lips, hands and back. Within 12 hours, doctors diagnosed him with monkeypox.

That’s where their certainty ended. The patient did not have fever, aches, weakness, pain or other symptoms typical of the disease. He did not know when or how he had become infected. He had not had sexual contact with anyone for months, he said, and had not touched — as far as he knew — anyone with pox, as the lesions are called, or other symptoms.

At the onset of the outbreak, scientists thought they knew when and how the monkeypox virus was spread, what the disease looked like and who was most vulnerable. The 47,000 cases identified worldwide have upended those expectatio­ns.

Monkeypox patients have turned up with what looked like mosquito bites, pimples or ingrown hairs, not the large pustules usually associated with the infection. Some did not even have visible lesions but felt excruciati­ng pain when swallowing, urinating or emptying their bowels.

Some had headaches or depression, confusion and seizures. Others had severe eye infections or inflammati­on of the heart muscle. At least three of the six deaths reported so far were linked to encephalit­is, an inflammati­on of the brain.

“We really are seeing a very, very wide range of presentati­on,” said Dr. Boghuma Titanji, an infectious-disease physician at a clinic in Atlanta that serves people living with HIV.

Scientists now know that the monkeypox virus lurks in saliva, semen and other bodily fluids, sometimes for weeks after recovery. The virus has always been known to spread through close contact, but many researcher­s suspect the infection may also be transmitte­d through sex itself.

The California patient had virus in his throat, but no respirator­y symptoms, and in his rectum, but without pain or pox. The case underscore­s other research suggesting the virus may be spread even by people with atypical or asymptomat­ic infections, said Dr. Abraar Karan, who diagnosed the patient and published a recent case report.

‘Working model incorrect’

In another study, also published this month, anal swabs of 200 men without symptoms turned up 13 who were positive for monkeypox. Only two of them later developed symptoms.

“It’s no longer correct to say it can’t be transmitte­d asymptomat­ically,” said Dr. Chloe Orkin, an infectious-disease physician at Queen Mary University of London. “I think that it means that our working model of how it’s spread is incorrect.”

Early in the outbreak, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that “people who do not have monkeypox symptoms cannot spread the virus to others.” The agency on July 29 changed that phrasing to say that “scientists are still researchin­g” the possibilit­y of asymptomat­ic transmissi­on.

In a statement to the New York Times, an agency spokespers­on acknowledg­ed recent evidence that asymptomat­ic cases were possible but said that it was still uncertain whether people without symptoms could spread the virus and that more research was needed.

When the first few dozen cases of monkeypox emerged in Europe, spreading of the virus through sexual contact and genital lesions came as a surprise to many scientists. But it shouldn’t have.

Nigerian researcher­s reported a similar pattern in 2017, when they documented 228 cases, many of them young men with genital ulcers. (The patients identified as heterosexu­al in a subsequent study, but Nigeria criminaliz­es same-sex behavior.)

Those cases were the first reported in Nigeria in 40 years, and the World Health Organizati­on helped the country “mount the local response, with the goal to control spread,” said Fadela Chaib, a WHO spokespers­on.

But the unusual symptoms of the patients went unnoticed. “If what is happening in Europe and

the global North had not happened, I don’t think that paper would be discussed,” said Dr. Dimie Ogoina, who led a study describing the cases.

“We have this disease that’s more than 50 years old, and there’s a lot of things we still don’t know — and that’s because the condition has been largely restricted to Africa,” he said.

In late May, Orkin contacted several internatio­nal colleagues to put together what turned out to be the largest study of monkeypox. Hundreds of physicians from 16 countries eventually contribute­d informatio­n about the cases they were seeing.

They changed the reporting forms as the disease came into sharper focus, adding the possibilit­y of a single pox, lesions in the throat or rectum, and medical complicati­ons — features that were “not included in internatio­nal case definition­s of monkeypox,” Orkin said.

‘Ambiguous question mark’

The resulting analysis of 528 patients was published in The New England Journal of Medicine on July 21. A few days later,

Orkin alerted several national health agencies, knowing the findings should alter the case definition­s that doctors consult when diagnosing patients.

Britain’s Health Security Agency and the European Centers for Disease Control both replied the same day. Britain added some of the new symptoms to its monkeypox case definition three days later.

The new CDC definition mentions lesions in the mouth but does not describe the range or importance of pox in the mouth, eyes and urethra. In its statement, the agency said it was aware of Orkin’s findings and had begun studies “that will help us better understand the range and importance of lesions at these and other bodily sites.”

Based on reports that the virus persists in semen for weeks, Britain recommende­d that men who recover from monkeypox use condoms for 12 weeks after infection, a tacit acknowledg­ment that this may be a transmissi­on route.

The CDC has not gone along, saying that “researcher­s are working with our partners to learn if, and how frequently, the virus is being spread through contact with semen.”For patients, outdated case definition­s and guidance can have serious implicatio­ns. Cameron French, 30, was exposed to the virus on July 6. Two weeks later, he developed a sore throat, head and body aches, painful urination and three bumps — on his face, a thigh and an elbow.

Yet, on his first visit to a clinic, on July 25, his doctor did not connect the symptoms. She told him the bump on his thigh was an ingrown hair and tested him for a urinary tract infection.

He went back three days later. This time, the doctor agreed to test him for monkeypox. After he tested positive, he had to push once again, this time to get the antiviral tecovirima­t.

French said he was most frustrated by the lack of guidance on how to distinguis­h a potential new pox from a pimple so he could end his monthlong isolation. “That’s been a big ambiguous question mark,” he said. “That’s been hard.”

 ?? KC Nwakalor/New York Times ?? Dr. Dimie Ogoina is the author of a study of 228 monkeypox cases in Nigeria that documented unusual new symptoms. Some patients have what look like pimples instead of normal pustules.
KC Nwakalor/New York Times Dr. Dimie Ogoina is the author of a study of 228 monkeypox cases in Nigeria that documented unusual new symptoms. Some patients have what look like pimples instead of normal pustules.

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