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In 1980, the World Health Assembly announced that smallpox had been successfully eradicated as a disease of humans. The disease clinically and immunologically most similar to smallpox is monkeypox, a zoonosis endemic to moist forested regions in West and Central Africa. Smallpox vaccine provided protection against both infections. Monkeypox virus is a less efficient human pathogen than the agent of smallpox, but absent smallpox and the population-wide immunity engendered during eradication efforts, could monkeypox now gain a foothold in human communities? We discuss possible ecologic and epidemiologic limitations that could impede monkeypox's emergence as a significant pathogen of humans, and evaluate whether genetic constrains are sufficient to diminish monkeypox virus' capacity for enhanced specificity as a parasite of humans.
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Mary G. Reynolds
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Darin S. Carroll
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Kevin L. Karem
United States Food and Drug Administration
Current Opinion in Virology
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
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Reynolds et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a111343eeb8b6643916a62a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.coviro.2012.02.004