
“This outbreak is moving faster than our
efforts to control it,” Margaret Chan, chief of the World Health
Organization, said at a meeting, as reported by Reuters.
The Zaire strain of the Ebola virus that’s
involved in the current outbreak has had a fatality rate in the past of
up to 90 percent. However, the fatality rate of the current outbreak is
lower. That’s because “90 percent is when you receive absolutely no
medical care,”said Dr. Nahid Bhadelia, M.D., the associate hospital
epidemiologist at Boston Medical Center and director of Infection
Control at Boston University’s National Emerging Infectious Disease
Laboratories.
“Right now you’re seeing with supportive care, there’s a 60 percent mortality in the field,” she told HuffPost.
But how exactly does the virus work to
provoke such extreme symptoms — Ebola is notorious for causing, in some
cases, bleeding from the eyes and ears — and cause death? Bhadelia
explained why the body has such a hard time fighting off the deadly
virus:
HOW DOES EBOLA ENTER THE BODY IN THE FIRST PLACE?
Ebola is not known to infect people through
the air — you must come into contact with the virus somehow in order to
be at risk for infection, Bhadelia said. It’s transmitted through
exposure to an animal that carries the virus (such as a bat or primate),
through exposure to the bodily fluids of a human who is infected and
symptomatic, and through exposure to items that have been contaminated
with the virus. People who are “providing care for a household member …
when they’re cleaning up vomit or diarrhea, they come into contact [with
the virus], and the way it’s transmitted is there’s virus in the
fluids,” she said. “That virus gets into your own body through the nose,
mouth and such.”
Ebola can also survive outside the host for a
significant period of time — as long as a couple of days — at room
temperature. “That’s why infection control is such a huge part of this,”
Bhadelia said. “If you have sterilization of equipment, if you have
availability of disinfectant, things like IVs … and if you’re able to
clean all those environments and isolate patients effectively, the
outbreak would never take a foothold.” This is why places with good
infection control and medical infrastructure face absolutely no risk for
outbreaks from this pathogen, she added.
WHAT HAPPENS IN THE BODY ONCE INFECTION OCCURS?
Once the Ebola virus makes its way into the
body, it gets in the body’s cells and replicates itself. “Then it comes
bursting out of our cells and produces this protein that wreaks havoc,”
Bhadelia explained. The protein is called ebolavirus glycoprotein, and
attaches to the cells on the inside of the blood vessels. This increases
permeability of the blood vessels — leading to blood leaking out of the
vessels. “The virus causes derangement in the body’s ability to
coagulate and thicken the blood,” she said. Even people who don’t show
hemorrhagic symptoms will experience this leaking of blood from the
vessels — which can eventually lead to shock and, ultimately, death.
The Ebola virus is also a master of evading
the body’s natural defenses: It blocks the signaling to cells called
neutrophils, which are white blood cells that are in charge of raising
the alarm for the immune system to come and attack. In fact, Ebola will
infect immune cells and travel in those cells to other parts of the body
— including the liver, kidney, spleen and brain.
Each time one of the cells is infected with
the Ebola virus and bursts, spilling out its contents, the damage and
presence of the virus particles activates molecules called cytokines. In
a healthy body, these cytokines are responsible for provoking an
inflammatory response so that the body knows it’s being attacked. But in
the case of an Ebola patient, “it’s such an overwhelming release [of
cytokines], that’s what’s causing the flu-like symptoms” that are the
first sign of Ebola, Bhadelia said.
WHAT DO THE SYMPTOMS LOOK LIKE?
Ebola generally starts with flu-like
symptoms. Though it’s known for the extreme hemorrhagic symptoms — the
bleeding out of the eyes, etc. — not everyone will experience these. “In
fact, only 20 percent of people will have [these extreme symptoms]”
Bhadelia said. “Some people may succumb to the illness before it gets to
that point, some may have minor bleeding, some may just have bleeding
of the gums, or bruising.”
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