Skip to main content

FM
Former Member

Why did the Ebola outbreak occur in west Africa?

The Ebola outbreak in west Africa took many an expert by surprise by erupting thousands of kilometers from its origins in central Africa.

Updated 15 October 2014, Source - Health24

 

 

The Ebola virus species that has killed more than 4,000 people in west Africa caught everyone by surprise when it erupted thousands of kilometres from its historical hotbed.

 

The outbreak, experts say, revealed just how little we know about the deadly agent.

 

What is the virus' natural range? Are there limits? Can they shift?

"Previously we were under the impression that this problem would be predominantly restricted to central Africa. Clearly, that is not the case," University of Warwick virology professor Andrew Easton told AFP.

 

"This outbreak emphasises that viruses do not respect borders."


Different species of Ebola virus

Prior to the west African outbreak, the Zaire species of Ebolavirus had killed just under 1,100 people, all of them in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Congo and Gabon, since the disease was first recorded in 1976.

 

Zaire is the deadliest of the four African species of Ebolavirus, part of a family of viruses that cause haemorrhagic fever. A fifth, the Reston Ebolavirus, has been recorded in Asia.

 

How the virus found its way into the human population of west Africa remains, for now, a mystery.

 

Fruit bats are believed to be the virus' natural reservoir in the wild -- they do not fall ill from it, but can infect apes and monkeys and small antelopes, even humans directly.

 

Humans become exposed to the virus if they kill and butcher infected animals for food, or bushmeat, a practice that is common in parts of west Africa's tropical forests.

 

What seems likely is that last December, a single human caught the virus this way, and then kicked off a transmission chain in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.

Bats brought it?
But why was a "central African virus" in west Africa?

 

One theory is it was brought by a migrating bat, or a colony of bats - the animals can fly thousands of kilometres in pursuit of seasonal fruit.

 

It could also have been passed unnoticed from bat to bat to bat ever westward through the African forests and jungles over a period of time.

 

Another idea is that a human contracted the virus in central Africa and carried it west.

 

"However, it is not likely, as the outbreak was in a very isolated area where the local population have almost no access to travel across the distances required and travel over land is certainly unlikely due to the rapidity of the infection," said Easton.

 

In west Africa, the virus could have passed directly from bats to humans who hunt or eat them, or come into contact with the animals' excrement in caves, on fruit or under trees -- or via infected bushmeat.

Cause of outbreak not fully understood

Another possibility is that the virus already made its way to west Africa years ago and was simply waiting for conditions to become right for a human outbreak.

 

Or it might have been in west Africa just as long as in central Africa, just waiting for humans to move closer.

 

The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) said the reasons for the outbreak are "not fully understood yet".

 

But "changes in land use and penetration into previously remote areas of rainforest bringing humans into contact with potential reservoirs might have played a role," the agency told AFP by email.

 

"These things are purely chance events," said University of Nottingham molecular virology professor Jonathan Ball.

 

"You need the right conditions: you need an infected animal source, you need humans to then come into contact with that animal source."

Zaire Ebolavirus may be to blame

A genetic study published in September said the virus responsible for the west African outbreak was a member of the Zaire Ebolavirus family, and may have diverged from central African strains about 10 years ago.

 

Easton said the west African Zaire Ebolavirus species was "incredibly similar" to that found in central Africa.

 

"The appearance of a virus that appears to have travelled from central to west Africa demonstrates that we lack much important knowledge about the 'natural history' of this virus."

 

Despite all the unknowns, it would appear Zaire Ebolavirus is more widespread than previously believed, and more mobile.

 

"Studies published in 2010 and 2012 detected antibodies to the Zaire Ebolavirus in the blood of certain fruit bat species in Ghana," virologist Olivier Reynard of France's CIRI infectious diseases research centre told AFP.

 

Its "circulation zone may be a lot wider than we thought".

 

A study last month said more than 22 million people live in parts of Africa where conditions exist for the Ebola virus to jump from animals to humans.

 

"African states need to prepare a plan for dealing with this and similar viruses" as soon as they emerge, Easton said, urging wealthy nations to lend support.

 

Source - http://www.health24.com/Medica...west-Africa-20141015

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Ebola virus: frequently asked questions

The National Institute for Communicable Diseases has released information that addresses the most frequently asked questions about Ebola.

Updated 31 July 2014, Source - Health24

 

ebola

A sign warns visitors that area is a Ebola infected.

Copyright: Sergey Uryadnikov ~

 

How is Ebola treated, how easy is it to contract it, can it be prevented and how likely is it to spread from west Africa? The National Institute for Communicable Diseases (NICD) answers these pressing questions.

What is Ebola virus disease?

Ebola virus disease (EVD) was previously known as Ebola haemorrhagic fever.

It is a severe, often fatal disease in humans and nonhuman primates (monkeys, gorillas and chimpanzees).

EVD is caused by a virus, and first appeared in 1976 when two outbreaks (one in an area near the Ebola River in Democratic Republic of Congo, and the other in South Sudan) occurred. Since then, sporadic outbreaks have occurred, most commonly in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Uganda, South Sudan, Congo and Gabon.

The origin of Ebola virus is not known, but fruit bats are thought to be the likely host of the virus.

How do people become infected with Ebola virus?

Ebola virus is transmitted to humans through direct contact with the blood, secretions, organs or other bodily fluids of infected animals (which include chimpanzees, gorillas, bats, monkeys, forest antelope and porcupines). This occurs when hunters/other persons come into contact with dead animals found lying in the rainforest, or handling raw meat of infected animals.

Once a person is infected, the Ebola virus can spread to other people in the community.

Infection occurs from direct contact (through broken skin or mucous membranes, including the nose, eyes and mouth) with blood, or other bodily fluids and secretions (including stool, urine, saliva, semen) of infected people.

Image: A view of gloves and boots used by medical staff, drying in the sun, at a center for victims of the Ebola virus in Guekedou, on April 1, 2014. The viral haemorrhagic fever epidemic raging in Guinea is caused by several viruses which have similar symptoms -- the deadliest and most feared of which is Ebola.

 

GUINEA-HEALTH-EBOLA : News Photo

Photo credit SEYLLOU/AFP/Getty Images

Less commonly, infection can also occur from direct contact (through broken skin or mucous membranes, including the nose, eyes and mouth) with environments that are contaminated with an Ebola patient’s infectious blood or body fluids, such as soiled clothing, bed linen, or used needles.

Burial ceremonies in which mourners have direct contact with the body of the deceased person have also been responsible for spreading infection in some outbreaks.

Image: Staff of the 'Doctors without Borders' ('Medecin sans frontieres') medical aid organisation carry the body of a person killed by viral haemorrhagic fever, at a center for victims of the Ebola virus in Guekedou, on April 1, 2014. The viral haemorrhagic fever epidemic raging in Guinea is caused by several viruses which have similar symptoms -- the deadliest and most feared of which is Ebola

 

GUINEA-HEALTH-EBOLA : News Photo

Photo credit should read SEYLLOU/AFP/Getty Images.

 

Source - http://www.health24.com/Medica...d-questions-20140731

FM

Researchers begin testing Ebola vaccine in Africa

Three volunteer workers in Mali have been injected with an experimental Ebola vaccine as part of a trial that is the first of its kind in Africa.

Updated 10 October 2014, Source - Health24

 

ebola

Three people in Mali were injected with an experimental Ebola vaccine, the first such trial on African soil, the Health Ministry said Friday.

 

The volunteers were among 40 Malian health workers who agreed to participate in an international trial of the cAd3-EBO-Z vaccine, which was developed by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases in the eastern US state of Maryland.

 

The trial vaccine was previously tested on chimpanzees and was found to stimulate an immune response in the apes against the Ebola virus.

"We should be able to have very preliminary safety results and even some immunology results by the end of November," said Samba Sow, director general of the Centre for Vaccine Development in the capital, Bamako.

 

It is expected to take several months before small amounts of the vaccine will be available, Sow said.

 

One volunteer, a 37-year-old paediatrician, said he decided to participate in the trial to help save lives. He was hoping to become immune to the Ebola virus, the unnamed doctor said, "because if we have a case of Ebola in Mali, I would want to be called to be involved in treating that person."

 

Initial trials of the vaccine started in September on healthy individuals in the United States and Britain and 40 people are also to take part in Gambia.

 

A trial for a second vaccine developed by Canada's health agency is being conducted in the US.

 

More than 8,000 Ebola cases have been reported in West Africa and almost half the patients have died, according to the World Health Organization.

 

Source - http://www.health24.com/Medica...e-in-Africa-20141010

FM
Originally Posted by RiffRaff:
Originally Posted by Cobra:

LastShipSeriesIntertitle.jpg

After a global viral pandemic "wipes out" over 80% of the world's population, the crew (consisting of 217 men and women) of a lone unaffected U.S. Navy guided missile destroyer, the fictional USS Nathan James (DDG-151), must try to find a cure, to stop the virus and save humanity.

 

Highly Recommended to watch this series.

I sure only white people...with ah few token blacks...oon that ship

You probably saw it already. After I watch the first part, it grips me to watch all twelve episodes. 

FM
Originally Posted by RiffRaff:
Originally Posted by Cobra:

LastShipSeriesIntertitle.jpg

After a global viral pandemic "wipes out" over 80% of the world's population, the crew (consisting of 217 men and women) of a lone unaffected U.S. Navy guided missile destroyer, the fictional USS Nathan James (DDG-151), must try to find a cure, to stop the virus and save humanity.

 

Highly Recommended to watch this series.

I sure only white people...with ah few token blacks...oon that ship

They have a black woman in charge post Apocalypse and she is as brutal as ISIS...but as usual you are right.

FM

Add Reply

×
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×