Artigo Acesso aberto Produção Nacional Revisado por pares

First case report of monkeypox in Brazil: clinical manifestations and differential diagnosis with sexually transmitted infections

2022; UNIVERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1590/s1678-9946202264054

ISSN

1678-9946

Autores

Evelyn Lepka de Lima, Luiz Alberto Costa Barra, Luciana Marques Sansão Borges, Lucas Alberto Medeiros, Marcia Y. S. Tomishige, Lucas de Souza Loureiro Abbud Santos, Anderson José Dias da Silva, Camila Cristina Martini Rodrigues, Luiz Cesar Fernandes de Azevedo, Lucy Santos Villas-Boas, Camila Alves Maia da Silva, Thaís Moura Coletti, Erika R. Manuli, Ingra Morales Claro, Camila Malta Romano, Mariana Severo Ramundo, Tomas Moutinho, Éster Cerdeira Sabino, José Ângelo Lauletta Lindoso, Claudia Figueiredo‐Mello,

Tópico(s)

Plant Virus Research Studies

Resumo

In 2022, an outbreak of monkeypox is being reported in non-endemic areas, with unusual clinical manifestations. The detailed clinical description of the first patient that received the diagnosis of monkeypox in Brazil is reported here, whose clinical manifestations can easily lead to misdiagnosis of sexually transmitted infections. A 41 years old male presented to an emergency room with a vesicular rash with eight days of evolution. He had traveled to Portugal and Spain and reported non-penetrative sexual involvement with three different male individuals. On the third day of symptoms, he sought medical care and received empirical treatment directed to sexually transmitted infections. As the symptoms did not improve, he sought medical attention at an infectious disease referral center presenting, on admission, an ulcerated penile lesion with central necrotic crusts, a disseminated pleomorphic skin rash and an oropharyngeal ulcer. The monkeypox diagnosis was suspected due to the characteristics of the lesions and the history of intimate contact with casual partners, and it was later confirmed by sequencing the almost complete monkeypox genome. The patient was hospitalized for pain control, which required opiate administration. He developed a secondary bacterial infection on the penile lesions, which were treated with oral antibiotics. He was discharged after 14 days, with lesions in process of re-epithelialization. Given the current outbreak, we must consider the possibility of monkeypox in patients with suggestive lesions, anywhere on the body (including the genitals), added to an epidemiological link or history of intimate contact with strangers or casual partners.

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