EBOV: Difference between revisions
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==Clinical features== | ==Clinical features== | ||
===Symptoms=== | ===Symptoms=== | ||
Viral infection is characterized by the onset of malaise, fever, myalgia, diarrhea, vomiting, and headaches. As the disease progresses, gastrointestinal bleeding, lymphopenia, neutrophilia, maculopapular rash, conjuctivitis, along with external bleeding may occur. Some patients are able to recover from the infection; however, it remains unknown as to why some recover and others fail. | |||
Infected individuals are quarantined in a facility that entails the necessary safety measures authored by the CDC and WHO. Health care professionals dress in biohazard suits before coming in contact with a patient. If biohazard suits are not available, protective clothing, goggles, gloves, and mask should be worn. | |||
===Mortality=== | ===Mortality=== |
Revision as of 17:16, 24 July 2013
Etiology
Taxonomy
I Order = [[ Mononegavirales ]] I Family = [[ Filoviridae ]] I Genus = [[ Ebolavirus ]] I Species = [[ Zaire ebolavirus ]] I
Description
Pathogenesis
Transmission
There are two types of exposures that contribute to acquiring the Ebola virus. The first, primary exposure, is due to travel in an ebola endemic area. The second mode of transmission is contact with bodily fluids of an infected host. In addition, using unsterilized hospital equipment that came in contact with the virus.
Infectious dose and incubation
Upon invasion of host cells, the virus typically presents a 2-21 day incubation period. The infectious dose is very low; 1-10 aerosolized particles are sufficient to cause disease.
Epidemiology
Virulence Factors
VP35
GP
Clinical features
Symptoms
Viral infection is characterized by the onset of malaise, fever, myalgia, diarrhea, vomiting, and headaches. As the disease progresses, gastrointestinal bleeding, lymphopenia, neutrophilia, maculopapular rash, conjuctivitis, along with external bleeding may occur. Some patients are able to recover from the infection; however, it remains unknown as to why some recover and others fail. Infected individuals are quarantined in a facility that entails the necessary safety measures authored by the CDC and WHO. Health care professionals dress in biohazard suits before coming in contact with a patient. If biohazard suits are not available, protective clothing, goggles, gloves, and mask should be worn.
Mortality
Diagnosis
Typically, clinical diagnosis can only be made after the first few days of symptoms because the early symptoms could have been caused by many other factors. Laboratory tests such as, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), serum neturalization tests, antigen detection tests, virus isolation ,and a reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) definitively allow the detection of the ebola virus in a patient. These tests are conducted under maximum biological containment conditions.
Treatment
Prevention
Host Immune Response
References
References
Created by {Bhumi Patel}, student of Tyrrell Conway at the University of Oklahoma.