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Chicago detects first suspected case of monkeypox in man who traveled from Europe: U.S. tally rises to 21
- City of 2.5million recorded its first suspected case of monkeypox in a man
- Health chiefs said the individual had tested positive after returning from Europe
- Los Angeles also revealed its first case in an adult who was a ‘close contact’
- Pennsylvania has also reported its first in Philadelphia, but won’t reveal detailsÂ
- It brings the U.S. tally to 21 cases across as many as 11 states in the country
- Most are linked to recent travel to Europe or Canada which have outbreaksÂ
Chicago has detected a suspected case of monkeypox in a man who recently returned from Europe, health chiefs revealed Thursday.
The patient — who was not named — is the first case to be detected in Illinois since the outbreak began last month.
It brings the U.S. tally to 21 cases across as many as 11 states, with Los Angeles today also reporting its first suspected case in an adult ‘close contact’ of another case.
Health chiefs in Pennsylvania also revealed their first case in Philadelphia, but refused to reveal any further details to ‘protect the resident’s privacy’.
Each department insisted that the risk of the virus spreading to others in the state was ‘very low’, but contact tracing is underway.
Most infections in the U.S., however, have been detected among gay and bisexual men who had recently returned from abroad.Â
It is the latest in a global outbreak with more than 500 cases of the tropical disease spotted in two dozen countries outside of West Africa — where it is native.
World Health Organization chiefs are calling on people to limit their number of sexual contacts to stop the virus transmitting.
Monkeypox has now been detected across 19 U.S. states. Some of these cases have only tested positive for orthopox viruses — a family which includes monkeypox — but it is overwhelmingly likely these will be confirmed as the tropical disease
Pictured above are the early spot symptoms triggered by monkeypox. After the marks appear they become concave and turn black before eventually falling off
Pictured above are symptoms triggered by a monkeypox infection. Anyone with these warning signs is being urged to come forward
Pennsylvania’s case was revealed in a dashboard update by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
It is currently not known whether the monkeypox infection is suspected or confirmed.
Most cases reported initially test positive for orthopox viruses — the family which includes monkeypox and smallpox — before being sent for confirmatory swabs at the CDC.
Monkeypox is typically spread through physical contact with infectious skin lesions in patients.
People who are infected initially suffer a fever within the first 21 days, before a rash erupts on their face and spreads to the rest of the body.
It can take up to four weeks for symptoms to clear as the rash goes through several stages before eventually falling off.
Most cases are mild, but between one in 10 and one in a 100 people who are infected die from the disease.
In the U.S. New York has the most cases followed by California and Florida — which have both detected three infections.
Colorado and Utah have both spotted two, while Georgia, Massachusetts, Virginia, Washington and Pennsylvania have detected one.
There are now signs that the virus is spreading on American soil, after three cases were spotted in ‘close contacts’ of initial patients.
However, the outbreak is much worse globally — particularly in Europe.
Spain has reported the most cases on the continent (208), followed by England (188) and Portugal (119).
WHO chiefs suggest that the continent’s outbreak is linked to unsafe sex at two raves in Spain and Belgium.
Cases are currently mostly among gay and bisexual men, but health chiefs warn there is nothing stopping the disease spreading into other groups.
There are also mounting calls for the outbreak to be contained, with experts saying that if the virus is allowed to continue to spread it could spill over into the animal population — which would become a reservoir.
On Wenesday, the head of the WHO’s European division Dr Hans Kluge called on people to reduce their number of sexual partners to help stem the outbreak.Â
He also warned that the tropical disease ‘may not be containable’ in Europe as there are still undetected chains of transmission.
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