- published: 25 Oct 2009
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Ebola virus (/ɛˈboʊlə/;EBOV, formerly designated Zaire ebolavirus) is one of five known viruses within the genus Ebolavirus. Four of the five known ebolaviruses, including EBOV, cause a severe and often fatal hemorrhagic fever in humans and other mammals, known as Ebola virus disease (EVD). Ebola virus has caused the majority of human deaths from EVD, and is the cause of the 2013–2015 Ebola virus epidemic in West Africa, which has resulted in at least 28,638 suspected cases and 11,315 confirmed deaths.
Ebola virus and its genus were both originally named for Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of Congo), the country where it was first described, and was at first suspected to be a new "strain" of the closely related Marburg virus. The virus was renamed "Ebola virus" in 2010 to avoid confusion. Ebola virus is the single member of the species Zaire ebolavirus, which is the type species for the genus Ebolavirus, family Filoviridae, order Mononegavirales. The natural reservoir of Ebola virus is believed to be bats, particularly fruit bats, and it is primarily transmitted between humans and from animals to humans through body fluids.
Ebola virus disease (EVD), also known as Ebola hemorrhagic fever (EHF) or simply Ebola, is a viral hemorrhagic fever of humans and other primates caused by ebolaviruses. Signs and symptoms typically start between two days and three weeks after contracting the virus with a fever, sore throat, muscular pain, and headaches. Then, vomiting, diarrhea and rash usually follow, along with decreased function of the liver and kidneys. At this time some people begin to bleed both internally and externally. The disease has a high risk of death, killing between 25 and 90 percent of those infected, with an average of about 50 percent. This is often due to low blood pressure from fluid loss, and typically follows six to sixteen days after symptoms appear.
The virus spreads by direct contact with body fluids, such as blood, of an infected human or other animals. This may also occur through contact with an item recently contaminated with bodily fluids. Spread of the disease through the air between primates, including humans, has not been documented in either laboratory or natural conditions.Semen or breast milk of a person after recovery from EVD may carry the virus for several weeks to months.Fruit bats are believed to be the normal carrier in nature, able to spread the virus without being affected by it. Other diseases such as malaria, cholera, typhoid fever, meningitis and other viral hemorrhagic fevers may resemble EVD. Blood samples are tested for viral RNA, viral antibodies or for the virus itself to confirm the diagnosis.
Zaire /zɑːˈɪər/, officially the Republic of Zaire (French: République du Zaïre; French pronunciation: [za.iʁ]) was the name, between 1971 and 1997, of a Central African state, now known as the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The state's name derives from the name of the Congo River, sometimes called Zaire in Portuguese, adapted from the Kongo word nzere or nzadi ("river that swallows all rivers").
The state was a one-party state and dictatorship, run by Mobutu Sese Seko and his ruling Popular Movement of the Revolution party. It was established following Mobutu's seizure of power in a military coup in 1965, following five years of political upheaval following independence known as the Congo Crisis. Zaire had a strongly centralist constitution and foreign assets were nationalized. A wider campaign of Authenticité, ridding the country of the influences from the colonial era of the Belgian Congo, was also launched under Mobutu's direction. Weakened by the end of American support after the end of the Cold War, Mobutu was forced to declare a new republic in 1990 to cope with demands for change. By the time of its disestablishment, Mobutu's rule was characterized by widespread cronyism, corruption and economic mismanagement.
The International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement is an international humanitarian movement with approximately 97 million volunteers, members and staff worldwide which was founded to protect human life and health, to ensure respect for all human beings, and to prevent and alleviate human suffering.
The movement consists of several distinct organizations that are legally independent from each other, but are united within the movement through common basic principles, objectives, symbols, statutes and governing organisations. The movement's parts are:
South Africa, officially the Republic of South Africa, is the southernmost sovereign state in Africa. It is bounded on the south by 2,798 kilometers of coastline of southern Africa stretching along the South Atlantic and Indian Oceans, on the north by the neighbouring countries of Namibia, Botswana and Zimbabwe, and on the east by Mozambique and Swaziland, and surrounding the kingdom of Lesotho. South Africa is the 25th-largest country in the world by land area, and with close to 53 million people, is the world's 24th-most populous nation. It is the southernmost country on the mainland of the Old World or the Eastern Hemisphere.
South Africa is a multiethnic society encompassing a wide variety of cultures, languages, and religions. Its pluralistic makeup is reflected in the constitution's recognition of 11 official languages, which is among the highest number of any country in the world. Two of these languages are of European origin: Afrikaans developed from Dutch and serves as the first language of most white and coloured South Africans; English reflects the legacy of British colonialism, and is commonly used in public and commercial life, though it is fourth-ranked as a spoken first language.
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Ebola Virus: How does Ebola virus work? Behind the unprecedented Ebola outbreak in West Africa lies a species with an incredible power to overtake its host. Zaire ebolavirus and the family of filoviruses to which it belongs owe their virulence to mechanisms that first disarm the immune response and then dismantle the vascular system. The virus progresses so quickly that researchers have struggled to tease out the precise sequence of events, particularly in the midst of an outbreak. Much is still unknown, including the role of some of the seven proteins that the virus’s RNA makes by hijacking the machinery of host cells and the type of immune response necessary to defeat the virus before it spreads throughout the body. But researchers can test how the live virus attacks different cells in...
Natural Sound The World Health Organisation now says 108 people have died of Ebola in Zaire this year, out of the 144 people known to be infected by the virus. Most cases have been in Kikwit, 250 miles (400 kilometres) east of Zaire's capital, Kinshasa. A key role in the battle against the deadly virus is played by the many volunteers who help recover and bury the Ebola victims - a gruesome task for which they receive little thanks. No new cases have been reported since Sunday. Scientists researching the virus say there are indications it may get weaker as it passes down the chain of infection. But aid workers are still digging mass graves in Kikwit to cope with the number of deaths - there is not enough room at the burial site. Each day, these Red Cross volu...
CURTA A FANPAGE DE WATCH_DOGS https://www.facebook.com/ubisoft.brasil/app_428595220558285 Neste episódio do Nerdologia vamos ensinar como sobreviver ao temível Ebola! Apresentação e Roteiro: Átila Iamarino - http://www.twitter.com/oatila Edição e Arte: Tucano Motion - http://tucanomotion.com.br Apoio: Paloma Mieko - http://omnivora.com.br MATERIAL USADO: - Imagem representativa do Ebola http://goo.gl/9Dvq20 - Ben Stein http://goo.gl/4iQ3wD - O remédio do Quico http://goo.gl/3FsOeH - Mechanisms of Resistance in Gram-negative Bacteria to Beta-Lactam Antibiotics http://goo.gl/NQ2hL6 - Green Kryptonite http://goo.gl/iDicip - Flu Attack! How A Virus Invades Your Body http://goo.gl/dEhCPN - Simbionte vs Parker http://goo.gl/sMAUAo - catfell out with his own paws http://goo.gl/9tv8XX - Crédi...
Microbiologist Peter Piot brought Ebola to the world's attention nearly four decades ago. With rarely seen footage from his visit to Zaire in 1976, he describes how his team solved the mystery of the virus. Photo: Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp Subscribe to the WSJ channel here: http://bit.ly/14Q81Xy Visit the WSJ channel for more video: https://www.youtube.com/wsjdigitalnetwork More from the Wall Street Journal: Visit WSJ.com: http://online.wsj.com/home-page Follow WSJ on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/wsjlive Follow WSJ on Google+: https://plus.google.com/+wsj/posts Follow WSJ on Twitter: https://twitter.com/WSJLive Follow WSJ on Instagram: http://instagram.com/wsj Follow WSJ on Pinterest: http://www.pinterest.com/wsj/ Follow WSJ on Tumblr: http://www.tumblr.com/tagged/wall...
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EmpoweRN.com Hi Guys! Thanks so much for watching my nursing youtube channel: EmpoweRN. In this video my team and I did our best to help you understand the Ebola Virus Disease, which has cause so much pain and destruction to certain places in Africa and around the world. As a nurse, our understanding of this disease is of utmost importance so that we can best care for our patients, protect ourselves and our fellow co-workers. I really hope that this video helps you in your nursing or nursing student journey! If it did, please do me a favor & give the video a "thumbs up" and also post a comment! Winner from last video "Chronic Renal Failure": Melisa Pierson Hi Melisa Pierson , please email me at: Caroline@EmpoweRN.com. In the Subject please type: I won! Cannot wait to hear from you! For...
English/Nat Doctors in the Zairean town of Kikwit are working round the clock to contain the outbreak of the rampant virus, Ebola. Meanwhile, in the capital city Kinshasa, fears are growing that the disease is spreading. The Red Cross in Zaire has begun distributing thousands of pamphlets to residents in Kikwit explaining how the virus is transmitted. Zaire is struggling to cope with the latest threat of the Ebola virus. Whilst medical experts attempt to prevent the first major outbreak of the deadly virus in 16 years, people attempt to carry on with their lives. All the victims, except two, have died in Kikwit - a city of 600,000. It has been sealed off since Wednesday, but there have been two deaths in two other villages. Medical experts are now trying to det...
Italian/Eng/Nat Although four of their order have died from the deadly Ebola virus, 10 sisters of an Italian order remaining in Kikwit, Zaire, have not been infected and will stay in the central African country. Even so, two relatives of one of the dead nuns have been quarantined since they returned to Italy and local authorities were monitoring their health. In Zaire - Red Cross officials are struggling to educate the people and contain the fatal virus as much as possible. Life goes on for the people of Zaire, but there is tension in the air. People gather here - outside the convent of the Sisters of the Poverelle- as if there were answers inside. They want to go inside and speak with the nuns - but no one is let in. SOUNDBITE: (Engloa: local language) "Th...
A 1976 photograph of two nurses standing in front of Mayinga N., a person with Ebola virus disease; she died only a few days later due to severe internal hemorrhaging.
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T/I: 10:17:39 A team of Swedish medical experts has arrived in Kikwit, Zaire to train local doctors and nurses who are treating victims of the deadly Ebola virus. The team, from the Swedish Centre for Disease Control, is being led by Doctor Bo Niklasson. By using protective suits, the doctors are trying to convey to hospital staff the importance of sterilisation. In the quarantined Kikwit Hospital, Doctor Niklasson reports, living patients are placed next to dead patients. SHOWS: KIKWIT, ZAIRE 24/5 Doctor Bo Niklasson of the Swedish Centre for Disease Control SOT (in English) on the virus and the conditions in the hospital Doctor Niklasson and members of the team putting on jump suits and entering the hospital where people infected with the ebola virus are quaranti...
The appearance of this negative sense single stranded RNA (nonsegmented) virus is filamentous in structure(NIH, 2010)[8]. This Ebola was discovered in the Democratic Republic of Congo and is a species of the Genus ebolavirus. The Genus ebolavirus contains five different species. The five species are: Sudan ebolavirus (SEBOV), Reston ebolavirus (REBOV),Bundibugyo ebolavirus (BEBOV), Ivory Coast ebolavirus (CIEBOV), and Zaire ebolavirus (ZEBOV)(NIH, 2010)[9]. They were all discovered around 1976 with only one strain that is not pathegenic in humans which is the Reston ebolavirus. The filoviruses can cause up to a 90% mortality rate in humans as well(NIH, 2010)[10]. The Ebola is not considered to be living due to the fact that without a host the virus will die, although this topic is highly c...
(31 Dec 1995) Somalia - Withdrawal Of UN Troops Somalia US Marines walking on beach Warship at sea Soldier on radio APC/Tanks roll past People looting house Pick-up truck full of Somali militia-men with machine guns and bazooka Looter with loaded wheelbarrow running Inflatable boats with US flags approaching shore MS marine unrolling barbed wire Demonstration against Operation United Shield Banner and chanting demonstrators US Marines as stray bullet goes overhead Marines behind shield Explosion and smoke Cobra attack helicopters rising over airport runway Mogadishu, Somalia Mohamed Farah Aideed raises arm to lead chant Children with wreaths Aideed with wreath around neck smiling and holding flag Mothers seated in food queue with malnourished children Children by mot...