EBOLA Imagine going on vacation to a foreign country and
when youcome home y?ou are horribly sick. Your head hurts, you have a highfever, and you
start
vomiting. Chances are that you may havecontracted? the Ebola virus. Ebola was first
discovered in the village of Yambuku(1) nearthe Ebola River in Zaire. Since its
discove?ry, there
have beenfour outbreaks of this disease. There are three known strains, ofvariations of
ebola.
There is no known cure for this disease(2).Ebola has become one of the most mysterious
and
feared viruses onthe face of this earth. Ebola's ??first documented appearance was in
Zaire in
1976. Noone knows where ebola comes from or what the original host is.However,
sc??ientists know
that man is not ebola's natural host(3).The host was first suspected of being carried by
monkeys
in theAfrican r?ain forests(4), but in one case the monkeys at a holdingfacility broke
out and had to
be killed. In the pursuit of a cure ?and an origin, there have beenseveral teams of
scientists
whose top priority is to find theviruses origin(5). The teams have ?trekked through the
rainforests
of Africa to collecting different species of animals,bugs, and plant life. Bugs are also
coll?ected
from the hospitalsand from the surrounding huts of the villages. So far 36,000specimens
have
been collected. Once they have been gathered, thespecimens are put into liquid nitrogen
and
flown back to theUnited States, where they are studied at t?he Centers for DiseaseControl
in
Atlanta Georgia and the Army Medical Research Instituteof Infectious Diseases at Fort
Detrick?
Md.,(6). Researchers havediscovered the source of human infection for all level
fourorganisms
except ebola(7). This means that all organisns thatcause deadly viruses have been
contained and
studied, and have hadantibodies created to ward of the illn?esses that are caused.
Although
Ebola is a mystery to humans, the virus isrelatively hard to catch and it kills quickly,
l?essening
thechance victims will infect others. It is transmitted by contactwith bodily fluids
like blood, vomit
and semen or contaminatedsyringes and is not known to be passed along through
casualcontact(8). When the first outbreak of ebola occur??red, it was in 1976 inZaire
and in
Sudan at the same time. There were 318 casesreported in Zaire and 240 of those cases
prove?d
to be fatal. InSudan, there were 284 cases and 134 of those cases proved to befatal. In
1979,
there was another small epidemic in the sameregion of Sudan. In 1989 there was a
breakout in
Reston Virginia,at a monkey holding facility, that killed ov?er 400 monkeys thathad been
shipped
from the Phillines. This strand however, is onlylethal to monkeys and id not a threat
to
humans(9). In 1995, therewas an outbreak in Kikwit Zaire that claimed 233 lives. At
least7 people
survived that outbreak becauses of a new breakthroughthat is a possible solution to the
loss of
lives that are sufferedin a outbreak. Blood from one sur?viving patient can be
transfusedto a
person of the same blood type to possibly save the personslife. Such was the case in
199?5(10).
Scientists were able tofind who the first person to contract the virus was in 1995.
Theman's name
was Gaspard Menga. Menga infected his family, and hisfamily infected others(11). Menga
is
known as the index patient.The reason it is so import?ant to have the index patient is
thatthis way
they can trace the patients movements and try to find theorigin of the virus.
S?cientists are now
arguing that if therewasn't so much interference with the rain forests that therewouldn't
be new
diseases emerging all the time(12) The most recent outbreak happened in January of
1996 in
asmall village in inland Zaire. Two child?ren were playing when thecame upon a dead
chimpanzee
and they took it back to the villagewhere the villagers celebrated for th?e finding of
such a
wonderfulthing. The reason this was so celebrated was because meat is rarein that
village.
Anyone who helped clean or cook the animalbecame ill with the deadly ebola virus. The
final
death count was16 people. Villagers have been? warned not to eat any animals thatthey
find
already dead and to be careful not to eat any sickanimals that they may encounter?.
Scientists
now believe that monkeys are not the original hostbecause they seem to just as
susceptible to the
disease as humans.Scientists are hoping that they will make some substantialdiscoveries
with this
outbreak.(13) Scientists do know t?hat ebola is a strand of sevenproteins(14) that
belongs to a
family of viruses calledfilovirusus. The virus consists of a she?ll of
proteinssurrounding genetic
material. The virus attaches itself to a hostcell, and changes the chemicals makeup to
fit ?its own
so that itcan reproduce(15). Ebola is a hemorrhagic virus that has a short
incubationperiod of
about two days to two weeks(16). It causes high fever,chills, internal and external
bleeding,
vomiting, the eyes turnred and the skin becomes b?lotchy and bruises appear. The
surfaceveins
and arteries erode. Organs liquify and blood flows fromevery opening in the body?
including the
eyes and ears(17). Thisis followed by a painful death that usually occurs within
threeweeks(18).
There are three known strains of The virus. Ebola Zaire,ebola Sudan, and ebola Reston.
Ebola
Zaire is the most lethal ofthe three fo?llowed by ebola Sudan and then ebola Reston.
EbolaReston
is the least worried about because it has not proved to behostile to? humans. The
question of
whether or not this virus could becomeairborne has struck fear in many. Scientists say
that it
isunlikely that it will become airborne, because it is killed byultraviolet rays within
seconds. The
only way that it couldsu?rvive is if it mutated to become resistant to ultraviolet rays.
At this point,
a person is more likely to contract HIV thanit is to contract the ebola virus, although
it takes ten
years toaffect a person the way ebola does in ten days. Even tho??ugh ebola is a
very
mysterious and feared disease, itis in the process of becoming more understood. It can
destroy
anentire c?ity in a matter of weeks, and could wipe out an entirenation if it ever became
airborne,
but it is a very difficultdisease to ?contract so the united states is probably safe from
anynear
future epidemics. On the other hand many third worldcountries cou?ld have serious
problems if
there is an outbreak dueto unsanitaryliving and medical conditions. The hospitals and
medicalper?sonnel reuse needles that have been infected and they don't uselatex or any
other kind
of gloves which can be a cause of wides?pread sickness. Everyone hopes that diseases
like ebola
will notget out of control before a cure can be found. Such hopes see?munreasonable due
to the
facilities available in some areas of theworld.
lable in some areas of theworld.
|