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keypox virus (MPXV) has gained global attention in view of the current multi-country outbreak affecting non-endemic regions including several European countries, Canada, the US and Australia, and without known epidemiological links to endemic settings in most cases[1](#ref-0001). The first ever diagnosed human case of MPXV infection was in 1970 in a male infant in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC, formerly known as Zaire)[2](#ref-0002), and further cases have since occurred predominantly in West and Central Africa[3](#ref-0003). The limited data available from previous outbreaks suggest that children may be at greater risk of severe forms of disease with potential complications including sepsis, encephalitis and death[4](#ref-0004). Jezek et al. reported on the clinical features and outcomes of 282 patients with monkeypox between 1980 and 1985 in the DRC; 90% of patients were <15 years old (the youngest being one month old)[5](#ref-0005). Amongst unva ccinated patients mortality in their study was 11% but was higher in the youngest children at 15%. In a retrospective study of a 2003 US monkeypox outbreak (due to the West African clade) associated with imported pet prairie dogs, the first outbreak occurring outside of an endemic region, seventy one percent (24/34) of cases were in adults[6](#ref-0006). However, paediatric patients were admitted to the intensive care unit at a significantly higher rate than adults (50% vs 9%, p = 0.02) and the most critically ill patients in the outbreak were two young children whose complications included retropharyngeal abscess and encephalopathy. It however important to note that the age-specific epidemiology of monkeypox has changed over time; the median age at presentation has evolved from young children (4 years old in the 1970s) to young adults (21 years old) in 2010-2019[3](#ref-0003).
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Medicine by Alexandros G. Sfakianakis,Anapafseos 5 Agios Nikolaos 72100 Crete Greece,00302841026182,00306932607174,alsfakia@gmail.com,