Volume 29, Number 6—June 2023
Dispatch
Tanapox, South Africa, 2022
Table
Year | Location of exposure | Epidemiologic description | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
1957 |
Ngau, Kenya (Tana River Valley) |
Several Wapakomo school children diagnosed with tanapox |
(1) |
1962 |
Between Garissa and Garsen, Kenya (Tana River Valley) |
About 50 case-patients from the Wapakomo tribe |
(1) |
1965–1966* |
Holding facilities of primate supplier, USA |
Infected macaques from the same supplier, distributed to 3 primate research centers in Oregon, California, and Texas, USA |
(2–4) |
1966–1968† |
Laboratory-acquired |
Several laboratory workers in Oregon and California became infected after handling of laboratory macaques |
(2–4) |
1971† |
Laboratory-acquired |
Human volunteer was inoculated with tanapox virus, and clinical progression of the disease was monitored and recorded |
(1) |
1979–1983 |
Mongala, Democratic Republic of Congo (then Zaire) |
A total of 357 cases reported, of which 264 were confirmed by laboratory testing |
(3) |
1999 |
Bagamoyo, Tanzania |
Traveler from Germany diagnosed with tanapox upon return from Tanzania |
(5) |
2002† |
Sierra Leone |
Person from Sierra Leone admitted to hospital in New York, USA, 2 weeks after arrival from Sierra Leone |
(6) |
2004 | Republic of Congo | Volunteer working with chimpanzees has onset of tanapox; only diagnosed after return to USA | (7) |
*Initially identified as Yaba-like disease virus; subsequent research indicated homology with Tanapoxvirus.†Date of report (date of actual case not published).
References
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1These first authors contributed equally to this article.
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