EBOLA…THE DISEASE NAMED AFTER A CONGOLESE RIVER
Since a Liberian died in Lagos last week of Ebola virus, the country
has been on edge with health authorities running helter-skelter. Africa
Check offers insight into this disease named after a river
In February 2014, an outbreak of the Ebola virus was identified in the
south-eastern forests of Guinea, the first time the virus had been
recorded in the West African state. By March, it had spread from
Macenta, Gueckedou and Kissidougou to the capital Conakry. By April,
cases had been confirmed in a further two districts – Dabola and
Djingaraye – and in neighbouring Liberia.
The disease has since
advanced to the capitals of Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia, and it
has killed two doctors, Dr Samuel Brisbane from Liberia and a Ugandan,
with two more being seriously ill.
Now Nigerian officials are
racing to prevent an outbreak in Africa’s largest city after a Liberian
man died in Lagos shortly after arriving at the airport last Tuesday.
All its entry points were put on red alert.
Médicins sans
Frontières has called this outbreak – the world’s largest recorded to
date – “unprecedented”, due to its broad geographic spread. The World
Health Organization (WHO) have recorded 1,201 cases attributed to the
Ebola virus up to last week, including 672 deaths.
Ebola is a
terrifying phenomenon: it kills up to 90% of infected people; death can
occur in as little as a week; and, prior to death, patients may
haemorrhage, bleeding internally and externally. There is no vaccination
and there is no cure.
The origins of Ebola
The Ebola
virus is named after the Ebola River in the Democratic Republic of
Congo, where the disease claimed its first known victims in 1976. A
separate strain broke out simultaneously in Nzara, Sudan.
Unlike bacteria, which are single-celled organisms that multiply by
dividing themselves, viruses require hosts to replicate: they take over
living cells and then force the infected cells to reproduce the virus.
While bacteria can be combated with antibiotics, the same is not true of
viruses.
Ebola is a ribonucleic acid (RNA) virus and
multiplies particularly rapidly in its host creating a high pathogen
dose. The science writer David Quammen, who has investigated the origins
and spread of the virus, writes that “[RNA viruses] produce acute
infections, severe for a short time and then gone. Either they soon
disappear or they kill you.”
In the process, “sneezing, or coughing or vomiting or bleeding or diarrhoea … facilitates transmission to other victims”.
There are five known species of Ebola virus: Bundibugyo ebolavirus; Zaire
ebolavirus; Reston
ebolavirus; Sudan
ebolavirus; and Taï Forest ebolavirus.
All but the Reston strain can be fatal to humans and all but the Reston strain are found in Africa.
Until recently, the Zaire strain of Ebola was thought to be behind the
current outbreak, with the US Centres for Disease Control (CDC) noting a
98% match between the West African and Zaire strains. The Zaire strain
of Ebola is the most deadly: it attacks all organs in the body,
including the skin, and can have a fatality rate of up to 90%.
Since its first appearance – and excluding the current outbreak in West
Africa – the strain has killed 1,098 of the 1,388 people it has
infected, an average case fatality rate of 79%.
However, a team
of experts studying the West African strain reported in the New England
Journal of Medicine recently that the Guinea outbreak is a new strain
of the virus: though closely related to Zaire ebolavirus, the current
strain is endemic to West Africa and developed parallel to the central
African ebolavirus strain.
According to the team’s
investigation, the strain’s outbreak can be traced to the death of a
two-year-old child in Gueckedou on December 6 last year.
How is Ebola transmitted?
Ebola is thought to be a zoonotic or animal-borne virus. The virus
survives in a “reservoir” host – an animal or insect that carries the
virus at no cost to itself – and is passed on to other animals or humans
through contact with the bodily fluids, secretions or organs of the
host animal.
Though it has not been conclusively proved, the
fruit bat (Pteropodidae) is considered to be the natural host or
“reservoir” of the ebola virus. The exact manner in which Ebola enters
human cells remains a mystery.
Transmission to humans and
primates is thought to occur through direct contact with the animal
host, or through contact or consumption of the meat, bodily fluids or
secretions of animals that have become infected by contact with the
host. Guinea is a known wildlife trafficking hub and last month, the
country’s government issued a warning to citizens to avoid eating
traditional bushmeat dishes.
Once it has presented in humans,
Ebola is transmitted through direct contact, where broken skin or mucous
membranes come into contact with the blood or secretions of the
infected person. It may also be transmitted indirectly “through exposure
to objects (such as needles) that have been contaminated with infected
secretions”, according to the US Centres for Disease Control and
Prevention. This means that healthcare workers and family and friends of
those infected with the virus are at a higher risk of infection.
What does the virus do?
The Ebola virus causes a viral haemorrhagic fever, a set of severe
illnesses that are “multisystem” in that they affect various of the
body’s regulatory systems. These viral diseases damage the circulatory
system and may be accompanied by bleeding or haemorrhaging.
According to the WHO, patients will begin to show symptoms anywhere from
two to 21 days after exposure to the virus, mostly between days eight
and 10. Patients present with fever, weakness, muscular pain, headaches
and sore throat. The generality of the symptoms at this stage makes it
difficult to distinguish Ebola from various other diseases, including
malaria, typhoid fever, meningitis or cholera.
As the disease
develops, Ebola sufferers may experience vomiting, diarrhoea, a red
rash, difficulty in breathing and swallowing. The virus severely
compromises the immune system, and affects liver, kidney and respiratory
function, as well as the skin and blood. Blood clots may form and
patients may experience haemorrhaging, bleeding internally and
externally.
Treating Ebola
There is no vaccine or cure for the Ebola virus, though several vaccinations are currently being tested.
According to the US CDC, treatment is thus limited and merely
supportive of the body’s immune function: providing fluids, electrolytes
and oxygen; keeping blood pressure constant; and treating additional
infections with antibiotics.
It is unclear why some people
infected with the virus survive where so many do not, but it is thought
to relate to the strength of the individual’s immune system, the strain
of the virus and the viral dose the person has been exposed to.
In addition to supportive and symptomatic treatment, health workers can
only really control the spread of the virus: isolating those infected,
raising awareness of the virus and how it is spread in affected
communities, ensuring appropriate protective gear is worn by all in
contact with Ebola sufferers and ensuring the quick and safe burial of
those who have succumbed.
7/30/2014
EBOLA…THE DISEASE NAMED AFTER A CONGOLESE RIVER
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