President Bush's Remarks on Smallpox
December 2002
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Typical smallpox rash distribution
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Day 3 of rash
  
Day 7 of rash
Smallpox
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Classic smallpox lesions
 
  
What is Smallpox?
Images of Smallpox
Umbilicated lesions
Confluent lesions
Images of Smallpox
On any one part of the body, all lesions are in the same stage of development  
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General
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Hasn't Smallpox Disappeared?
Photo source: Evaluating Patients for Smallpox
Acute, General Vesicular or Pustular Rash Illiness Protocol
Department of Health and Human Services
Center for Disease Control and Prevention
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Smallpox Mass Vaccination Readiness Plan
 
  
 
   
 
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Day 5 of rash 
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Department of Health and Human Services
HHS
Smallpox Information
Exposure to the smallpox virus is followed by an incubation period during which people do not have any symptoms and may feel fine. This incubation period averages about 12 to 14 days but can range from 7 to 17 days. During this time, people are not contagious.

The first symptoms of smallpox include fever, malaise, head and body aches, and sometimes vomiting. The fever is usually high, in the range of 101 to 104 degrees Fahrenheit. At this time, people are usually too sick to carry on their normal activities. This is called the prodrome phase and may last for 2 to 4 days. 
During this period people are sometimes contagious.

A rash emerges first as small red spots on the tongue and in the mouth. 

These spots develop into sores that break open and spread large amounts of the virus into the mouth and throat.
At this time, the person becomes most contagious.

Around the time the sores in the mouth break down, a rash appears on the skin, starting on the face and spreading to the arms and legs and then to the hands and feet. Usually the rash spreads to all parts of the body within 24 hours. As the rash appears, the fever usually falls and the person may start to feel better.

By the third day of the rash, the rash becomes raised bumps.

By the fourth day, the bumps fill with a thick, opaque fluid and often have a depression in the center that looks like a bellybutton (umbilicated lesion). This is a major distinguishing characteristic of smallpox.

Fever often will rise again at this time and remain high until scabs form over the bumps.

The bumps become pustules—sharply raised, usually round and firm to the touch as if there’s a small round object under the skin. People often say the bumps feel like BB pellets embedded in the skin and
the person is still contagious.

The pustules begin to form a crust and then scab.

By the end of the second week after the rash appears, most of the sores have scabbed over. 
The person is still contagious.

The scabs begin to fall off, leaving marks on the skin that eventually become pitted scars. Most scabs will have fallen off three weeks after the rash appears.

The person is contagious to others until all of the scabs have fallen off.

Scabs have fallen off.
Person is no longer contagious.

                        Source of above is the Center for Disease Control
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Connecticut Department of Public Health

Bioterrorism Preparedness and Response
Center for Disease Control
(CDC)
Smallpox Information
Old Saybrook, Westbrook, Clinton, Killingworth, Deep River, Chester, Essex
East Haddam, East Hampton, Haddam, Hebron, Marlborough
 
   
 
Vaccine
Information
 
Most patients with smallpox have lesions on the palms or soles