A Case Study: A case report of human Monkeypox with unusual
features
Dear Editor,
I want to report a very significant case report of a unique case of
human monkeypox infection that presented with unusual features in terms
of epidemiology, transmission and clinical symptoms. This case report
indicates an evolving form of the human monkeypox infection that
requires a broad strategy for testing and diagnosis of monkeypox in this
new form.
A 36 year old male consulted for the appearance of rashes in the
anogenital regions, right eyelid margin lesions with discharge, several
papular lesions in the left eyelid with progressive conjunctival and
peri-orbital involvement. The patient has severe pain in both eyes,
significant light sensitivity, vision impairment and also presented with
asthenia, headache, myalgia, lymphadenopathy, chills and sweats but had
no fever at all. The patient was not gay or bisexual. He had no history
of travel to any endemic country or any contact with a confirmed or
diagnosed monkeypox patient. The patient did not have any history of
smallpox vaccination, incidents of any autoimmune disease or HIV (human
immunodeficiency virus) infection.
The patient was diagnosed positive for the monkeypox virus using a
cutaneous polymerase chain reaction (PCR) swab from conjunctival PCR
swabs and the anogenital rash. The viral load was similar in the
conjunctival secretions and the cutaneous lesions (29.5 vs 27.3 [cycle
threshold] respectively). Three days into hospitalization, the patient
developed a mild fever which lasted just 24 hours. The patient continued
to present with photophobia and severe eye pain with anogentital rashes
over a period of 6-9 days. There was no recorded development of
paronychia and lymphangitis of the anogenital lesions or any subsequent
incidence of cellulitis in this case. This is very different from the
clinical symptoms that have been documented in many cases of the human
monkeypox 2022 outbreak. 2,3 The patient was treated
using oral as well as intravenous tecovirim. Ocular therapy included
administration of topical trifluridine, antibacterial drops and an
ointment of paraffin and retinol palmitate. The patient description and
hospitalization treatment summary is shown in Table 1 below.
Previous outbreaks of human monkeypox (involving the Congo Basin virus
clade or the West African virus clade) have been documented as having a
typical clinical onset with fever, rash and subsequent lymphadenopathy.1 The patients in most cases had documented travel
history to endemic nations or confirmed contact with a positive
monkeypox case. The known, usual complications involved development of
pneumonitis, encephalitis, vision-threatening keratitis or concurrent
development of secondary bacterial infections.2,3,4,5,6 The 2022 outbreak of monkeypox in various
countries involved gay, bisexual or other males and some did have travel
histories to endemic countries. 6,7,8,9
What is striking in this reported case is that the genital rash resolved
after 8 days with the unusual rash initiation before fever, the
continued presence of ocular lesions at multiple stages of the infection
and the negligible febrile viral prodrome phase. Atypically, the ocular
symptoms like the periorbital lesions continued to remain severe for 15
days before ocular symptoms and lesions as well as visual impairment
were resolved. The patient was discharged after 18 days from the onset
of the ocular symptoms and the anogenital rash. The patient did not
suffer from any permanent eye damage or vision impairment despite the
severe ocular involvement of both the eyes in the monkeypox infection.
Further follow up with the patient after two weeks also confirmed that
there was no progression to permanent sequelae in the eyes. This case
has shown very unusual epidemiology and clinical symptoms and the
potential of transmission via eye contact due to the detected viral
loads.
The case report presented above shows that the human monkeypox infection
may be circulating in this new form with unusual clinical symptoms,
epidemiology and transmission routes. As such, clinicians need to be
vigilant and follow wider monkeypox case definitions and the possibility
of early ocular involvement as a symptom of severe infection also. As
suggested by some previous literature, there is need to revisit the
currently accepted case definition being used by clinicians in all
countries for a possible human monkeypox case as this follows the
typical viral prodrome duration and clinical phases with the known
transmission routes and usual epidemiology. The need to take into
consideration atypical transmission and clinical symptoms is vital as it
will help clinicians to test for atypical suspected monkeypox cases in
the future. Thus, there is need to have broad case definitions for
possible human monkeypox cases with rare clinical symptoms and
transmission.
Data availability statement: Data available in article