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Ebola virus[EbO´lu] Pronunciation Key, a member of a family (Filovirus) of viruses that cause hemorrhagic fevers. The virus, named for the region in Congo (Kinshasa) where it was first identified in 1976, emerged from the rain forest, where it survives in an as yet unknown host. Once a person is infected with the virus, the disease has an incubation period of 221 days; however, some infected persons are asymptomatic. Initial symptoms are sudden malaise, headache, and muscle pain, progressing to high fever, vomiting, severe hemorrhaging (internally and out of the eyes and mouth) and in 5090% of patients, death, usually within days. The likelihood of death is governed by the virulence of the particular Ebola strain involved. Ebola virus is transmitted in body fluids and secretions; there is no evidence of transmission by casual contact. There is no vaccine and no cure.
Outbreaks of Ebola virus in humans occurred in both the Congo (then ZaIre) and Sudan in 1976 and 1979; other outbreaks occurred in Gabon, Uganda, and again in the Congo. Outbreaks have been exacerbated by underequipped hospitals that reused syringes and lacked proper protective clothing for personnel. In 1989 a similar virus was found in monkeys imported to the United States.
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