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Ebola Virus

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Ebola Virus Hemorrhagic Fever Outbreaks 1976- First Major Outbreak (ZEBOV) 1976- Sudan (SEBOV) Occur Sporadically www.cdc.gov for more information Where does Ebola ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ebola Virus


1
Ebola Virus
  • Hemorrhagic Fever

2
Outbreaks
  • 1976- First Major Outbreak (ZEBOV)
  • 1976- Sudan (SEBOV)
  • Occur Sporadically
  • www.cdc.gov for more information

3
Where does Ebola hide?
  • 2002- Fruit Bats
  • Antibodies against Ebola
  • Ebola Gene sequences in liver and spleen
  • Fruit bats do not show any symptoms
  • Best candidate to be the reservoir
  • More research needs to be done

4
Geography
  • The link between human infection by the Ebola
    virus and their proximity to primates is clear.
  • -Outbreaks occurred in countries that house
    80 percent of the worlds remaining wild gorilla
    and chimpanzee populations.
  • - The outbreaks coincided with the outbreaks
    in wild animals.
  • - The same distinct viral strains were
    isolated in animal carcasses and in the bodies of
    those who handled those carcasses.
  • - These outbreaks were preceded by an
    abnormally large death in wild Gorilla
    populations.

5
Clinical Observations
  • Incubation period 2-21 days
  • Stage I (unspecific)
  • -Extreme asthenia (body weakness)
  • -diarrhea, nausea and vomiting, anorexia
  • abdominal pain
  • - headaches
  • - arthralgia (neuralgic pain in joints)
  • - myalgia (muscular pain or tenderness),
    back pain
  • - mucosal redness of the oral cavity,
    dysphagia (difficulty in swallowing)
  • - conjunctivitis.
  • - rash all over body except in face
  • If the patients dont recover gradually at
    this point, there is a high probability that the
    disease will progress to the second phase,
    resulting in complications which eventually lead
    to death (Mupapa et al., 1999).

6
  • Stage II (Specific)
  • - Hemorrhage
  • - neuropsychiatric abnormalities
  • - anuria (the absence of urine formation)
  • - hiccups
  • - tachypnea (rapid breathing).
  • Patients who progressed to phase two EHF
    almost always die. (Ndambi et al., 1999)
  • Late Complications
  • -Arthralgia
  • - ocular diseases (ocular pain, photophobia
    and hyperlacrimation)
  • - hearing loss
  • - unilateral orchitis( inflammation of one or
    both of the testes)
  • These conditions are usually relieved with
    the treatment of 1 atropine and steroids

7
Epidemiology
  •  Ebola Hemorrhagic Fever was first found in 1976
  • It struck two countries within that year
  • a.  Sudan in a town called Nzara
  • b.  Zaire, now known as the Democratic Republic
    of Congo
  •   In these two instances the mortality rate was
    between
  • 50 90
  • Following those epidemics, Ebola hit Africa in
    many other instances the worst yet being in the
    year 2000 when it struck Uganda infecting more
    than 400 people.

8
Transmission
  • contracted through contact of any infected
    individuals body fluids

Ebola HF prevention poster used in Kikwit
outbreak.
9
Controlling the spread of Ebola
  • a. Hospitals must follow precautionary methods,
    such as 
  • 1.      wearing gloves
  • 2.      isolating infected individuals
  • 3.      practicing nurse barrier techniques
  • 4.      proper sterilization and disposal of
    all equipment
  • b.  Burials must be done correctly
  • 1.      no washing or touching carcass
  • 2.      put into body bags and bury outside
    city
  • c. Report any questionable illness to
    officials                   

10
Ebola Subtypes
  • Ebola-Zaire
  • (ZEBOV)
  • Ebola-Sudan (SEBOV)
  • Ebola Ivory-Coast (ICEBOV)
  • Ebola-Reston (REBOV)

11
MOLECULAR STRUCTURE
  • Characterization of the virus
  • Order Mononegavirales
  • Family Filoviridae
  • Genus Ebolavirus
  • Species Ebola-Zaire, Ebola-Sudan, Ebola-Cote
    d-Ivoire, Ebola-Reston
  • Morphology under electron microscope
  • filamentous, enveloped RNA virus
  • approx. 19 kb in length (1 kb 1000 RNA
  • bases/nucleotides) or 60-80 nm in diameter
  • single-stranded, linear, non-segmented
  • negative-sense RNA (encoded in a 3 to 5
    direction)
  • appears to have spikes due to glycoprotein on
  • outside membrane

12
  • Structure of Ebola genome and proteins
  • Transcribed into 8 sub-genomic mRNA proteins 7
    structural and 1 nonstructural
  • 7 structural proteins
  • nucleoprotein (NP)
  • 4 viral/virion proteins (VP35, VP40, VP30, VP24)
  • glycoprotein (GP)
  • RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (L protein)
  • NP, VP35, VP30, L protein required for
    transcription replication
  • VP40, GP, VP24 associated with the membrane

13
Proteins
14
Ethics
  • Biogeograophical Ethics is defined as motivation
    based on ideas of right and wrong when dealing
    with the geographical distribution of animals and
    plants.
  • This concept of can be used to explain the
    worlds shockingly small response to the Ebola
    Virus.
  • Because there was little travel to that region by
    people of more developed countries, there was not
    much economic drive for a vaccine, treatment, and
    aid in prevention.

15
Bioterrorism
  • Since the September 11 bombings in the United
    States, the locality of this virus has become
    less isolated as the threat of bioterrorism looms
    large.
  • The Ebola virus is now on the A list for
    hopeful vaccination development.
  • Experiments have even been formed to show how
    Ebola can be used as a bioterror agent.
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