Brave doctor, Adadevoh loses Ebola battle
FRONTLINE medical Doctor, Ameyo Stella Adadevoh, who saved the
country from potential epidemic of the Ebola Virus Disease, EVD,
yesterday, fell to the vise-grip of the disease which she contracted
while attending to the index (first) Ebola case, the late
American-Liberian, Patrick Sawyer.
Dr. Adadevoh was infected
when she forcefully restricted Mr. Sawyer to his bed after he tried to
remove the drip administered on him.
Observers said, yesterday,
that her action probably saved many Nigerian lives because, if Sawyer
had succeeded in forcing himself out of the hospital, it would have been
difficult to trace those who had contact with him.
Minister of Health, Professor Onyebuchi Chukwu announced the death, yesterday evening, of Dr Adadevoh.
‘With this unfortunate development the total number of Ebola Virus
related deaths in Nigeria now stands at five. The other two patients
currently under treatment in the isolation wards are stable and are
being taken care of,‘ he stated.
doctor1
News of her death coincided with confirmation that the last three patients in the isolation centre may be discharged this week.
With her death, Nigeria has recorded five Ebola deaths, of which one
was the index (first) case, Patrick Sawyer, one medical doctor, two
nurses and the ECOWAS staff. Nigeria also has five Ebola survivors and
three more expected to be discharged later this week.
Dr.
Adadevoh, an experienced consultant physician and endocrinologist was
Lead Consultant with First Consultants Medical Centre, Obalende, Lagos,
came into the limelight shortly after the dramatic visit of Sawyer, and
will be remembered as the first Nigerian confirmed to test positive to
the Ebola virus. A holder of an MBBS from the University of Lagos,
UNILAG, as well as a Diploma in Endocrinology from the University of
London, the deceased practised in the United Kingdom and Nigeria for
more than three decades.
She was a member of the Nigeria Medical
Association, NMA, the British-Nigerian Association and a Fellow of the
National Postgraduate Medical College.
Anxiety
Anxiety had
escalated over her health in the last one week which necessitated a
group of concerned friends, families and associates to seek assistance
from the United States of America.
The call which attracted
attention of the public and government, however, did not yield the much
expected result, as she succumbed to the cold hands of death. A source
confirmed to Vanguard that spirited efforts to save her life proved
abortive. It was gathered that she died Monday night.
According to the source, the late Dr Ameyo Adedavoh could not make it due to the serious contact she had with the late Sawyer.
“She tried to fight the disease. She fought a good fight. She saved
Nigeria from imminent Ebola epidemic. She was the one that stopped late
Sawyer when he became violent and was able to stop him. It is
unfortunate we lost her. She is a heroine, even in death,” the source
stated.
Meanwhile, three more patients may be discharged any
moment from today. According to the source that pleaded anonymity, among
the three people that made it include a woman who gave birth in the
hospital (First Consultants) and later returned for vaccination.
Patrick-Sawyer
“The conditions of the three patients left in the isolation centre
remains stable. I cannot say when they will be released but all I can
tell you is that they are in stable condition and will be released any
time from now. It could be tomorrow or next. But they are in good
health,” the source said.
Cure for Ebola from survivors’ antibodies?
Meanwhile, in continuation of the search for a possible cure for Ebola
Virus Disease, EVD, the Lagos State government is exploring several
options among which is the collection and examination of antibodies from
the blood of the Ebola survivors.
Commissioner for Health, Dr.
Jide Idris, disclosed this yesterday, during a tour of the Ebola
Isolation facility at Mainland Hospital, Yaba, Lagos.
He said:
“We are exploring the possibilities of collecting and examining the
antibodies possessed by the patients for possible prospects of a cure.
“The patients were admitted into the isolation centre based on the
result of tests conducted on them. But after some treatment, they
survived the virus, and the test conducted on them again showed
negative.”
Idris said the survivors were treated based on their
symptoms, but explained the need for more virologists in the fight
against the deadly virus because EVD patients are not like other
patients.
“The activities within the isolation centre are very
crucial, and one has to understand the protocol even if he or she has
the expertise in managing the patients.
“For Ebola cases, there
is specific training one has to go through, and one of the measures is
that the safety of the people must be considered paramount. This is
because the slightest mistake from any of the health officials can cause
infection.”
It could be recalled that four patients who have
survived the virus were discharged from isolation on Monday by the
combined federal and state government teams and their international
partners. Earlier over the weekend, a female doctor had been discharged
after surviving the virus.
This development brings the number of
survivors of Ebola in the country to five while three other patients yet
to scale the hurdle have been moved to the 40- bed capacity isolation
centre in the hospital.
WHO commends Nigeria
Also, the
World Health Organisation, WHO, has commended Nigeria’s response to the
current Ebola Virus disease outbreak, noting that efforts to contain the
cases in the country have paid off.
In an assessment of the
situation in Lagos, the global health body said the situation looks
reassuring and encouraging, noting that at present, all 12 confirmed
cases are all part of a single chain of transmission.
“Those
infected by the initial case include medical staff involved in his
treatment, a patient in the same hospital, and a protocol officer in
very close contact with the patient. The initial patient was vomiting
frequently during travel and upon arrival. No one on the same flight was
infected.
“The full recovery to date of one infected contact
is additional good news. It counters the widespread perception that
infection with the Ebola virus is invariably a death sentence. Evidence
suggests that early detection and supportive therapy increase the
prospects of survival.
“Intensive contact tracing, conducted by
Nigerian health officials and staff from the US Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, has not, so far, identified any further
confirmed cases outside the initial transmission chain,” said the WHO.
The global health body added that since the index case which arrived
Lagos on July 20 died on July 25, the 21-day incubation period has
lapsed, stressing that all 12 cases were confirmed in a WHO-approved
laboratory.
“The intensity of the search and monitoring effort
raises cautious optimism that further spread of the virus in Nigeria can
be stopped.
The search for additional cases continues, as does the current high level of vigilance,” the WHO observed.
Epidemiology and surveillance
Between 14 and 16 August 2014, a total of 113 new cases of Ebola virus
disease (laboratory-confirmed, probable, and suspect cases) as well as
84 deaths were reported from Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone.
NIPRD seeks upgrade to produce Ebola drug
In a related development, the Nigerian Pharmaceutical Research and
Development, NIPRD, has called for an urgent upgrade of its laboratory
to be able to produce necessary drugs to cope with the threat being
posed by the Ebola Virus Disease, EVD.
NIPRD Director-General,
Professor Karniyu Gamaliel, who made the call in an exclusive interview
with Vanguard, explained that the institution required what he called
“P4” laboratory to complement what they have in stock to be able to meet
the current challenges triggered by the EVD.
A P4 lab is a
high containment laboratory facility that can safely handle deadly
pathogens such as the smallpox and Ebola viruses.
Gamaliel said the
laboratory is needed urgently to enable the agency to fast-track
research into drugs that could be used as palliative for the EVD.
He remarked that although the agency currently has five departments
with fully equipped laboratories, it should operate maximally with 18 or
20 specialised laboratories.
“Our laboratories need a little
upgrading with facilities like the P4 bio-safety cabinet which will make
the laboratory very competent and very useful, and we insist that the
situation is an emergency given the position of Abuja as a
centrally-placed city.
“Ebola is a deadly pathogen and the
facilities we have need to be upgraded. I went round the facilities
yesterday and we don’t have the P4 facility but we have a structured
laboratory suitable for handling the virus and the various studies that
are relevant,” he said.
Gamaliel boasted however that the institution had the capacity to identify the virus in the infected persons.
“There are better versions coming in as we speak. We can do with up
scaling of such machines that would be required and sample handling
machines also which takes samples and stored in a safe way.
“I think we are the only laboratory that can do all those things and also monitor those activities on a door-to-door basis.
“ So I think we have a role in analysing the activities of the drugs
and the progression of the infection in people already infected so that
preventive measures can be carried out appropriately,” Gamaliel said.
How and why Ebola kills fast
Speaking on why the Ebola Virus Disease kills fast, Dr Michael Smith of
WebMD, said: “Everyone knows that Ebola kills but what exactly does it
do? This worm-like virus has a devious way of working. Once it gets in
the body, the virus attaches itself to the surface of the cells. Then it
invades them, replicates and causes the cells to explode, sending
infectious particles flying. From there, Ebola overpowers the immune
system. It uses the very cells that are meant to fight infection to
travel to other parts of the body, including the liver, spleen, kidneys
and brain. It attacks almost every organ and tissue.
“The
particle explosion also sets off an overwhelming inflammatory reaction.
That’s what causes the sudden flu-like symptoms that are the first signs
of Ebola. Inside the blood vessels, the virus causes abnormal clotting
and bleeding at the same time. Bleeding into the skin causes a red rash
that appears all over.
“With the ability to clot normally destroyed,
bleeding occurs internally as well as from the eyes, ears and nose.
This whole cascade of events causes the organs to fail. The loss of
blood, along with organ failure, is what makes Ebola so deadly.
“But if doctors can keep the organs working with intravenous fluids,
blood transfusions, a ventilator and other treatments, there’s a much
better chance they can save lives. The infection moves fast and it can
kill in one to two weeks. In the current outbreak, 60 per cent of the
people who caught the virus have died. Many more could likely be saved
with better access to medical care.”
Panic in Ibadan
Following alarm raised in Ibadan yesterday that an Ebola patient was
taken to Adeoyo State Hospital, Ring Road, some residents of the area
were already considering relocation from the hospital vicinity.
A baby allegedly infected with the virus was said to have been taken to the hospital on Monday.
Though, doctors were yet to confirm from tests conducted on the baby, people in the area were afraid of being infected.
When the baby allegedly showed symptoms of the deadly virus, staff and
other patients in the hospital reportedly ran for safety.
Reacting to the incident, the state Commissioner for Health, Dr. Muyiwa
Gbadegesin, allayed their fears that it had not yet been confirmed that
the baby had the virus.
He hinted that blood samples had been
taken and sent to the laboratory at the University College Hospital,
UCH, Ibadan for proper analysis.
“We saw a suspected patient.
It will be presumptuous to jump into conclusion until the result of the
test is out. But it is not likely to be positive. But let us wait for
the result of the blood test.”
Also, an epidemiologist with the
state Ministry of Health, Dr. Abass Gbolahan, also said: “From our
records at the Oyo State Ministry of Health, we are not aware of any
child said to have the infection.
8/20/2014
Brave doctor, Adadevoh loses Ebola battle
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