The nose tissue of a man with AIDs died after he was bitten by a monkey.
There was a red spot that was mistaken for sunburn.
There is a picture of the man's nose.
The man's nose tissue died after he was mistaken for a sunburn.
A man in his forties was diagnosed with sunburn after going to a family doctor with a red spot on his nose. Doctors from Germany wrote in the report that the spot had turned to dead tissue within three days.
The man had monkeypox on his penis and in his mouth.
The number of people who have caught monkeypox in countries where it isn't endemic has increased since May. Within four weeks, the illness can cause blisters.
The man, who hadn't had a sexually transmitted disease check before, was found to have undiagnosed syphilis and HIV that resulted in a weakened immune system.
The doctors wrote that the case shows the potential severity of monkeypox in the setting of severe HIV infections.
According to Paul Hunter, a professor in medicine at the University of East Anglia, UK, the skin on the nose and face can be killed by smallpox.
He said that it is likely that this would happen in severe cases of the virus.
Doctors said the man's nose became less swollen after a week of treatment with TPOXX and other drugs.
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