Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Update: Congo Outbreak Identified As Ebola

 

# 1126

 

 

Nearly 2 weeks ago reports began coming in of a deadly infectious disease hitting villages in the Democratic Republic of the Congo very hard.  On September 2nd, I covered the story here, and at that time there was no diagnosis. 

 

We now have confirmation, via the CDC, that this outbreak is due to the Ebola virus.

 

 

Congo confirms deadly illness outbreak as Ebola

10:11, September 12, 2007

 

An illness that has killed more than 160 people in southeastern the Democratic Republic of the Congo has been confirmed as Ebola, a highly contagious fever that kills up to 90 percent of people infected and has no cure or treatment.

 

The United States' Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta and another lab in Gabon confirmed the disease as a hemorrhagic fever, and specifically as Ebola, Health Minister Makwenge Kaput said on national television on Monday. He did not provide further details.

 

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), five samples have tested positive for Ebola. About 40 more samples are still pending.

 

At least 167 people have died in the affected region since late August and nearly 400 have fallen ill, said Jean-Constatin Kanow, the chief medical inspector for the affected province. Kinshasa, the capital, is 690 km northwest of the area.

 

Some of the patients have improved after being given antibiotics, which would have no impact on Ebola, WHO experts said. The experts said that led them to suspect that shigella, a diarrhea-like disease, or typhoid has broken out in the same area. Symptoms for the three diseases are similar in early stages. In severe cases of shigella and typhoid, hemorrhaging can also occur.

 

In the Congolese hospital where patients were being treated - a mud hut with a corrogated roof - patients are not being isolated. That means that patients who have shigella, which is not usually a fatal disease, might be mixed with those who have Ebola, putting them at risk at catching the highly fatal fever.

 

"There's no way we can be sure at this time how many cases are shigella and how many cases are Ebola," said Gregory Hartl, a WHO spokesman.
Yesterday, WHO issued an alert to its international partners, requesting more doctors and other experts, to travel to the Congo to help contain the outbreak. Experts from Medecins Sans Frontieres are already treating patients, but more help is needed.

(Cont.)