Mexican health authorities confirmed this Saturday, May 28, the first case of smallpox of mono in the country. This is a 50-year-old man living in the United States.
“Today (Saturday) we confirm the first imported case of smallpox monkey in Mexico. He is a 50-year-old man, a permanent resident of New York City, who probably caught it in the Netherlands. He is treated in CDMX (Mexico City) ”, the country’s Undersecretary of Health, Hugo López-Gatell, reported on Twitter.
“Fortunately, He is stable and in preventive isolation.. We hope that he will recover without complications,” she added.
López-Gatell did not specify the patient’s nationality or details regarding possible contacts with other people.
YOU CAN SEE: Argentina confirms second case of monkeypox in less than 24 hours
Last Friday, Argentine health authorities confirmed the first two cases of the disease in that country and in the region.
The first confirmed was a 40-year-old man who had returned to Argentina from Spain, while the second is a resident of that same European country, who is visiting the province of Buenos Aires and has no connection with the previous patient. .
The smallpox of mono It is an infectious disease caused by a virus transmitted to humans by infected animals. Person-to-person transmission is possible but is considered rare.
YOU CAN SEE: Monkeypox cases might be the “tip of the iceberg”, according to the WHO
The condition was first identified in humans in 1970, in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Currently, it is considered endemic in a dozen African countries.
Its appearance in non-endemic countries is what worries experts. So far, confirmed cases in non-endemic regions are generally benign and no deaths have been reported.
With information from AFP.