ADVERTISEMENT

Study of Liberia Ebola flare-up shows need for longer vigilance

Each of the three countries has experienced brief flare-ups since being declared Ebola free, including three isolated clusters of Ebola cases in Liberia.

Men walk by a mural that reads Get the hell of Liberia, Ebola! And don't come back in Monrovia, Liberia, April 1, 2016. REUTERS/James Giahyue

The results suggest Liberia and the other African countries at the centre of the outbreak should maintain high levels of vigilance for longer than thought to contain any future flare-ups of the deadly haemorrhagic fever.

The analysis, by an international team of scientists who looked at genetic data from samples taken directly from infected patients, was not able to establish how the virus was spread by the woman or which bodily fluids may have been involved.

World Health Organization data show West Africa's Ebola epidemic killed more than 11,300 people and infected some 28,600 as it swept through Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia from 2013 in the world's worst outbreak of the disease.

ADVERTISEMENT

The second flare-up, which included seven confirmed cases, centred on a village in Margibi County, a rural area near the capital Monrovia. To find out more about what triggered it, researchers led by David Blackley of the U.S. Centres for Diseases Prevention and Control isolated and sequenced viral genomes from infected patients.

They found a striking amount of genetic similarity with other Ebola sequences from West Africa, indicating the flare-up "was a continuation of the outbreak that began in 2013, and was not caused by an additional spillover event from an unknown, non-human reservoir".

Further analysis suggested this cluster was sparked by "a persistent, sub-clinical infection" in a woman who had previously had Ebola infection with clear symptoms, but and appeared to recover.

"It remains unclear ... how Ebola virus is able to lay dormant in an infected host, but ... the virus may replicate more slowly and persist in immune-privileged sites, such as the eye and testes, long after the acute, symptomatic phase of disease has occurred," the researchers wrote.

Ben Neuman, a virologist at Britain's Reading University, said the study was "a solid piece of molecular epidemiology detective work".

ADVERTISEMENT

Derek Gatherer, an Ebola expert at Lancaster University said it showed that the potential for the virus to become dormant in survivors and then be transmitted to others "may be a rare but important factor in prolonging outbreaks".

Any small resurgences of Ebola infection "could seed a fresh widespread epidemic", requiring intense public health efforts to contain and understand them, he added.

JOIN OUR PULSE COMMUNITY!

Unblock notifications in browser settings.
ADVERTISEMENT

Eyewitness? Submit your stories now via social or:

Email: eyewitness@pulse.ng

Recommended articles

FG to set up committee for awareness on PWD’s rights

FG to set up committee for awareness on PWD’s rights

Reps call on military to utilise modern tech for security issues in Nigeria

Reps call on military to utilise modern tech for security issues in Nigeria

UNN to reduce unemployment among Nigerian graduates through mentoring

UNN to reduce unemployment among Nigerian graduates through mentoring

AGF calls for strong internal controls to curb financial mismanagement

AGF calls for strong internal controls to curb financial mismanagement

Tariff has been hiked with no improvement - Abuja residents decry power outage

Tariff has been hiked with no improvement - Abuja residents decry power outage

Emefiele's trial adjourned to June 24, key witness cross-examined

Emefiele's trial adjourned to June 24, key witness cross-examined

Former ECOWAS Court VP slams EFCC chairman's handling of Yahaya Bello case

Former ECOWAS Court VP slams EFCC chairman's handling of Yahaya Bello case

Let’s drill 200k boreholes across the country  —  Obi begs wealthy Nigerians

Let’s drill 200k boreholes across the country  —  Obi begs wealthy Nigerians

Ondo 2024: Ex-governor's brother emerges gubernatorial candidate

Ondo 2024: Ex-governor's brother emerges gubernatorial candidate

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT