Outbreak of monkeypox at Rotterdam Zoo
Outbreak of monkeypox at Rotterdam Zoo | |
---|---|
Monkeypox | |
Virus strain | Monkeypox virus |
Location | Rotterdam Zoo |
First outbreak | 21 December 1964 |
First reported | 1964 |
Index case | Central/South American giant anteaters |
Arrival date | December 1964 |
Confirmed cases | 21 non-human primates, 2 anteaters (no human cases) |
Deaths | 11 |
Fatality rate | ~50% |
In 1964 there was an outbreak of
Unlike previous monkeypox outbreaks in laboratory monkeys, the outbreak in Rotterdam Zoo occurred in animals that were not for laboratory use, showed varying clinical presentations, and was particularly severe for orangutans. There were no reports of cases of transmission to humans.
In total, 11 of the 23 affected animals died, including six orangutans, the anteaters, three squirrel monkeys, the only one Asian gibbon and an American common marmoset. Several were complicated by fatal
Origin
Between 1958 and 1968, mainly for the purpose of producing and testing the polio vaccine, a small number of non-human primates from Africa and a larger number from Asia were being imported to Europe and the US.[1] During transit, there were often other wild animals with several opportunities to spread infection.[1]
On 9 December 1964, without being
Outbreak
Ten days after the onset of sickness in the anteaters, two Asian orangutans that were housed in a glass cage nearby, developed small blisters.
Affected animals typically had a generalised illness, some with skin lesions, and several died during early symptoms, before the spots appeared.[1] Unlike previous monkeypox outbreaks in laboratory monkeys, the outbreak at Rotterdam Zoo occurred in animals that were not for laboratory use, showed varying clinical presentations, and was particularly severe for orangutans.[1][7] All 10 orangutans became ill and six died, five of whom died before the onset of the rash.[1] Of those orangutans that survived, recovery was prolonged.[5] They found it difficult to eat, and the ones that died were noted to have suffered problems in breathing.[8]
The affected chimpanzees had blisters on their lips and face, but were otherwise well.
In total, 11 of the 23 affected animals died, including in addition to the orangutans and anteaters, all three squirrel monkeys, the Asian gibbon and the severely ill American common marmoset.[5][9] Several were complicated by fatal bacterial infections.[9]
No cases of transmission to humans were reported.
The laboratory
According to Isao Arita and Donald Henderson in 1976, how relevant that a strain of whitepox viruses, which resembled variola, were isolated from two cynomolgus monkeys at the National Institute for Public Health and the Environment three-months prior to the arrival of the anteaters was not clear.[2] On 9 December 1964 and 4 May 1965, poxviruses resembling monkeypox were isolated from kidneys of cynomolgus monkeys at the same laboratory.[2] A personal correspondence from Rijk Gispen's colleague, Jacoba G. Kapsenberg, in the early 1980s, revealed that the so-called cases of "silent monkeypox" were probably a result of contamination from monkeypox virus isolated from the Zoo cases.[10] Six years after the outbreak, Gispen detected high levels of monkeypox neutralizing antibody in two of the surviving orangutans, and concluded that it lasts long after infection.[11]
Response
The antiviral
Footnotes
- ^ Anteaters are not considered to play a role in the natural lifecycle of monkeypox virus. However, animals in captivity appear particularly vulnerable due to crowding, species mixing, or physiological stress.[6]
References
- ^ ISBN 978-0-323-15022-4.
- ^ PMID 186209.
- ^ a b c d e f g Arita, I; Henderson, A (1968). "Smallpox and Monkeypox in Non-human Primates" (PDF). Bulletin of the World Health Organization. pp. 277–283. Retrieved 29 September 2018.
- ^ ISBN 978-0-12-803678-5.
- ^ PMID 23626656.
- ^ "Qualitative assessment of the risk to the UK human population of monkeypox infection in a canine, feline, mustelid, lagomorph or rodent UK pet". GOV.UK. Retrieved 8 June 2022.
- ISBN 978-3-7643-7556-0.
- ISBN 0-8138-2556-3.
- ^ PMID 4349404.
- ISBN 978-92-4-156110-5.
- PMID 4340222.
- ISBN 978-87-16-00111-5.
- ISBN 978-0-387-25300-8.
Further reading
- Peters, J.C. (1966). "A monkeypox-enzooty in the Blijdorp Zoo". Tijdschr. Diergeneeskd. 91: 387–391. .
- Eradication of smallpox. WHO (Frank Fenner) 1976