Symptoms
The
incubation period for
smallpox is about 12 days. However, symptoms can
develop as soon as 7 days or as long as 19 days after exposure.
During the first 2 to 3 days of illness, smallpox causes symptoms that
affect the whole body (systemic symptoms), including:
- High fever, often rising to more than
104°F (40°C), then dropping
over 2 to 3 days.
- Extreme lack of energy (lethargy).
- Severe headache.
- Severe backache.
- Severe
abdominal pain and vomiting (in some cases).
- Delirium (in some cases).
- Seizures in some children.
Rash development and progression
After 2 to 3 days
of severe illness, the smallpox rash appears in the mouth and throat, but it
may not be noticeable. About 24 hours later, a rash appears on the face and
arms. During the first week of rash, a large amount of the smallpox (variola)
virus is in the saliva, making the infected person's saliva highly contagious.
Spreading the virus through coughing and sneezing is most likely at this
time.
Smallpox lesions appear on the skin over a 1- to 2-day
period. Unlike a
chickenpox rash, all smallpox lesions on the same part
of the body change appearance at the same time, about every 1 to 2 days. Over a
2- to 3-week period,
the rash
progresses
through the following stages:2
- Macules. Tiny flat,
red spots usually appear first in the throat and mouth. However, these may go
unnoticed until spots also show up on the face or arms. The rash then spreads
to the rest of the body, becoming most concentrated on the face, feet, and
hands.
- Papules. The red spots become bumpy,
growing to about
0.1 in. (2.5 mm) in
diameter.
- Vesicles. The lesions fill with
fluid, growing to about
0.2 in. (5.1 mm) in
diameter.
- Pustules. About 4 to 7 days after
the rash appears, the lesions become firm, dome-shaped, whitish, and
pus-filled, growing slightly larger with depressed centers. This stage lasts
from 5 to 8 days.
- Crusts. By the second week
of rash, the pustules crust over and turn into scabs. Scabs fall off 3 to 4
weeks after the rash first appears, leaving pitted scars.
Although a severe chickenpox infection may be mistaken
for smallpox, there are numerous
differences between chickenpox and smallpox
. For
example, the smallpox rash usually first appears in the throat and mouth or on
the arms, and then moves to the torso. The chickenpox rash usually first
appears on the torso, and pustules in many different stages are present at the
same time (while some are new, others are crusting over).
Death
Up to 30% of people infected with smallpox
die.4 The infection can overwhelm the body's defenses,
leading to organ failure. However, all cases of smallpox took place before
modern medical advances. So it is possible that less people would die if a
smallpox outbreak were to occur today.