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Mini Review on Clinical Aspects of Monkeypox.

Monkeypox is a disease caused by the monkeypox virus, which is a type of orthopox virus that comes from the virus family Poxviridae. Its first case reported in animals and humans was in 1958 and 1970, respectively. It is a viral zoonosis disease with two modes of transmission: animal to human (via direct contact or eating the meat of an infected animal) and human to human (via contact or contact with skin lesions, body fluids, and infected person's contaminated objects). The literature depicts that monkeypox is less contagious among individuals in contrast to smallpox; the infection chain of monkeypox is nearly five to six patients approximately. It has two clades, the West African and the Central African (the Congo basin). The Congo basin subgroup of monkeypox is highly transmissible and severe. The symptoms of monkeypox include fever, lethargy, headache, lymphadenopathy, myalgia, myodynia, fainting, shivers, backache, and rashes on the face and extremities. The most common symptom of monkeypox is lymphatic hyperplasia or, lymph adenopathy or swollen lymph nodes. It is proven to be very useful in the diagnosis of monkeypox. The antiviral drugs that are used for its treatment are tecovirimat, brincidofovir and cidofovir. Tecovirimat has fewer side effects and it shows better therapeutic action in comparison to brincidofovir and cidofovir. For the prevention of monkeypox, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention recommends the administration of the same vaccine used for smallpox named INVAMUNE, which is currently in its third generation. Its first and second generations have adverse side effects in patients having HIV or atopic dermatitis.

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