Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

Re: Two distinct homosexual monkeypox variants found in U.S., adding to outbreak's mystery

1 view
Skip to first unread message

Democrats love faggots

unread,
Jun 23, 2022, 6:30:02 AM6/23/22
to
In article <t1g97t$313rs$2...@news.freedyn.de>
fudgepacking queer <homos...@monkeypox.com> wrote:
>
> ...I spent all night sucking cocks.

At least two genetically distinct monkeypox variants are
circulating in the U.S., according to new sequencing data from
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Although the CDC hasn’t sequenced all 22 confirmed U.S. cases
yet, two of them were found to be genetically similar to a 2021
infection in a Texas man who traveled to Nigeria. Both are in
people who recently traveled to Africa — a woman from Virginia
and man from Florida.

The rest of the sequenced U.S. cases resemble the genetic codes
of the cases in Europe, and a 2021 infection in a Maryland
resident who traveled to Nigeria.

"While they’re similar to each other, their genetic analysis
shows that they’re not linked to each other," Jennifer
McQuiston, deputy director of the CDC’s High Consequence
Pathogens and Pathology division, said of the two variants at a
Friday press briefing.

McQuiston and other disease experts said this new information
suggests the U.S. cases stem from two outbreaks instead of one,
complicating our understanding of their origins.

"It’s likely that within the last couple of years, there have
been at least two different instances where monkeypox virus
spilled over to people in Nigeria from the animal that maintains
it and that that virus likely began to spread through person-to-
person close contact, possibly intimate or sexual contact,"
McQuiston said.

That possibility, in turn, raises questions about how long
monkeypox has been circulating outside Africa and how
transmissible the virus is.

“This is like tuning in to a new television series and we don’t
know what episode we’ve landed on,” Anne Rimoin, an epidemiology
professor at UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, said. “We’re
now just starting to get some of the origin story.”

Was monkeypox spreading undetected?
Nearly 900 monkeypox cases have been reported outside Africa
since early May, according to Global.health, a group that
gathers infectious disease data. Before that, the largest
outbreak in the Western Hemisphere was 47 U.S. cases in 2003.
Those people were infected by pet prairie dogs; no human-to-
human transmission was documented.

Experts are weighing various possible explanations for the quick
growth of the current outbreaks. It could be that a few events
simply gave the virus a chance to spread. Or, monkeypox may have
evolved to get better at human-to-human transmission. A third
hypothesis is that the virus may have been spreading undetected
for some time.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus suggested this
week that the third option is likely.

"We might be seeing [the variants] now because we’re looking so
hard," Andrew Read, a professor at Pennsylvania State University
who studies the evolution of infectious diseases, said.

But McQuiston said a previous large-scale outbreak would not
have been missed.

"It’s certainly possible that there could have been monkeypox
cases in the United States that went under the radar previously,
but not to any great degree," she said.

'Lots of genes to play with'
As for the idea that the virus has become more transmissible,
Read pointed to the fact that monkeypox seems to be spreading
more efficiently among close contacts than scientists had
observed in the past.

Monkeypox is a DNA virus, which does not mutate as fast as RNA
viruses like the coronavirus. But Read pointed out that DNA
viruses have long genomes: Moneypox's genome is seven times
larger than that of the coronavirus.

"The fact that it’s got lots of genes to play with means all
manner of things can happen," he said.

Stephen Morse, an epidemiology professor at Columbia University,
said it's worth investigating whether one variant spreads more
easily than the other.

"If a particular variant were capable of more cycles of human-to-
human transmission, that would be important to know," he said.

But Rimoin said it's too soon to know whether monkeypox has
evolved in any meaningful way.

The size of this outbreak, she said, "doesn’t necessarily mean
that the virus in and of itself has changed."

More transmission makes the virus harder to contain
Experts are optimistic that the U.S. outbreak can still be
contained, though they're concerned about ongoing transmission.

"I worry a lot about if it becomes very common in humans," Read
said. "The potential to become more common and more
transmissible through time, as we’ve had with Covid, would be
very, very unfortunate."

The more widespread cases become, the harder they are to
contain, but that "doesn’t mean that it’s impossible," Rimoin
said.

Experts know how to stop monkeypox transmission: Test people
with symptoms, isolate infected patients and vaccinate their
close contacts.

"I don’t think that the fact that there’s two [variants]
circulating now is going to complicate control measures," Read
said. "Let's just stop the evolution by getting rid of these
things now."

Put the queers in jail. That will stop it.

https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/two-monkeypox-
variants-found-us-rcna31894

Democrats love faggots

unread,
Jul 9, 2022, 8:10:03 AM7/9/22
to
In article <bb40cfb3-91f7-4fbe-9991-
61bfd1...@googlegroups.com>
0 new messages