Ebola virus disease (EVD) or Ebola hemorrhagic
fever (EHF) is the human disease caused by the ebola virus. Symptoms
typically start two days to three weeks after contracting the virus,
with a fever, throat and muscle pains,
and headaches. There is then typically nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea,
along with decreased functioning of the liverand kidneys. At this point,
some people begin to have problems with bleeding.[1]
The
disease is usually acquired when a person comes into contact with the
blood orbodily fluids of an infected animal such as a monkey or fruit
bat. Fruit bats are believed to carry and spread the virus without being
affected by it. Once infection of a human occurs, the disease may be
spread from one person to another. Men who survive may be able to
transmit the disease via their semenfor nearly two months. To make the
diagnosis, typically other diseases with similar symptoms such as
malaria, choleraand other viral hemorrhagic fever are first excluded.
The blood may then be tested forantibodies to the virus, or the viral
RNA, or the virus itself, to confirm the diagnosis.[1]
Prevention includes decreasing the spread of the disease from infected
monkeys and pigs to humans. This may be done by checking these types of
animals for infection and killing and properly disposing of the bodies
if the disease is discovered. Properly cooking meat and wearing
protective clothing when handling meat may also be helpful, as is
wearing protective clothing and washing hands when around a person who
has the disease. Samples of bodily fluids and tissues from people with
the disease should be handled with special caution.[1]
There is
no specific treatment for the virus. Efforts to help persons who are
infected include giving them either oral rehydration therapy or
intravenous fluids.[1] The disease has a high death rate: often between
50% and 90% of those who are infected with the virus.[1][2] It typically
occurs in outbreaks in tropical regions of Sub-Saharan
Africa.[1]Between 1976, when it was first identified, and 2014, fewer
than 1,000 people a year have been infected.[1][3] The largest outbreak
to date is the ongoing 2014 West Africa Ebola outbreak, which is
affecting Guinea, Sierra Leone, and Liberia. The disease was first
identified in the Sudan and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Efforts are ongoing to develop a vaccine; however, none exists as of
2014.

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