High-Contact Object and Surface Contamination in a Household of Persons with Monkeypox Virus Infection - Utah, June 2022

MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2022 Aug 26;71(34):1092-1094. doi: 10.15585/mmwr.mm7134e1.

Abstract

In May 2022, the Salt Lake County Health Department reported two real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-confirmed travel-associated cases of monkeypox to the Utah Department of Health and Human Services (UDHHS). The two persons with monkeypox (patients A and B) lived together without other housemates. Both persons experienced prodromal symptoms (e.g., fatigue and body aches). Eight days after symptom onset, patient A experienced penile lesions; lesions spread to the lips, hands, legs, chest, and scalp by day 10. Patient B experienced prodromal symptoms 8 days after illness onset of patient A; patient B experienced a lesion on the foot which spread to the leg and finger by day 11. Although both patients had lesions in multiple anatomic areas, the overall number of lesions was small, and lesions varied in presentation from "pimple-like" or ulcerated, to characteristically well-circumscribed and centrally umbilicated. Both patients had mild illness. The time from symptom onset to resolution was approximately 30 days for patient A and approximately 22 days for patient B.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Monkeypox virus*
  • Mpox (monkeypox)*
  • Prodromal Symptoms
  • Travel
  • Utah / epidemiology