Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers: DVRD
Article title: Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers: DVRD
Conditions: Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers, scrub typhus, arenaviruses, bunyaviruses, filoviruses, flaviviruses, hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, yellow fever
Source: DVRD
Special Pathogens
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Disease Information
- What Is a VHF?
- Fact Sheets
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Arenaviruses
- Lassa Fever
- LCM
- Rift Valley Fever
- Filoviruses
- Ebola HF
- Marburg HF
- All About HPS
Teaching and Prevention Materials
Recent Research
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Glossary of Terms
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Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers: Fact Sheets
Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers
What are viral hemorrhagic fevers?
The term viral hemorrhagic fever (VHF) refers to a group of illnesses that are caused by
several distinct families of viruses. While some types of hemorrhagic fever viruses can
cause relatively mild illnesses, many of these viruses cause severe, life-threatening
disease.
The Special Pathogens Branch (SPB) primarily works with hemorrhagic fever viruses that are classified as biosafety level four (BSL-4) pathogens. A listing of these viruses appears in the SPB fact sheet index. The Division of Vector-Borne Infectious Diseases, also in the National Center for Infectious Diseases, works with the non-BSL-4 viruses that cause two other hemorrhagic fevers, dengue hemorrhagic fever and yellow fever.
How are hemorrhagic fever viruses
grouped?
VHFs are caused by viruses of four distinct families: arenaviruses ,
filoviruses , bunyaviruses, and flaviviruses. Each of these families share a number of
features:
- They are all RNA viruses, and all are covered, or enveloped, in a fatty (lipid) coating.
- Their survival is dependent on an animal or insect host, called the natural reservoir.
- The viruses are geographically restricted to the areas where their host species live.
- Humans are not the natural reservoir for any of these viruses. Humans are infected when they come into contact with infected hosts. However, with some viruses, after the accidental transmission from the host, humans can transmit the virus to one another.
- Human cases or outbreaks of hemorrhagic fevers caused by these viruses occur sporadically and irregularly. The occurrence of outbreaks cannot be easily predicted.
- With a few noteworthy exceptions, there is no cure or established drug treatment for VHFs.
In rare cases, other viral and bacterial infections can cause a hemorrhagic fever; scrub typhus is a good example.
What carries viruses that cause
viral hemorrhagic fevers?
Viruses associated with most VHFs are zoonotic. This means that these viruses naturally
reside in an animal reservoir host or arthropod vector. They are totally dependent on
their hosts for replication and overall survival. For the most part, rodents and
arthropods are the main reservoirs for viruses causing VHFs. The multimammate rat ,
cotton rat,
deer mouse, house
mouse, and other field rodents are examples of reservoir hosts. Arthropod ticks and
mosquitoes serve as vectors for some of the illnesses. However, the hosts of some viruses
remain unknown -- Ebola and Marburg
viruses are well-known examples.
Where are cases of viral
hemorrhagic fever found?
Taken together, the viruses that cause VHFs are distributed over much of the globe.
However, because each virus is associated with one or more particular host species, the
virus and the disease it causes are usually seen only where the host species live(s). Some
hosts, such as the rodent species carrying several of the New World arenaviruses, live in
geographically restricted areas. Therefore, the risk of getting VHFs caused by these
viruses is restricted to those areas. Other hosts range over continents, such as the
rodents that carry viruses which cause various forms of
hantavirus pulmonary
syndrome (HPS) in North and South America, or the different set of rodents that carry
viruses which cause hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) in Europe and Asia. A few
hosts are distributed nearly worldwide, such as the common rat. It can carry Seoul virus,
a cause of HFRS; therefore, humans can get HFRS anywhere where the common rat is found.
While people usually become infected only in areas where the host lives, occasionally people become infected by a host that has been exported from its native habitat. For example, the first outbreaks of Marburg hemorrhagic fever, in Marburg and Frankfurt, Germany, and in Yugoslavia, occurred when laboratory workers handled imported monkeys infected with Marburg virus. Occasionally, a person becomes infected in an area where the virus occurs naturally and then travels elsewhere. If the virus is a type that can be transmitted further by person-to-person contact, the traveler could infect other people. For instance, in 1996, a medical professional treating patients with Ebola hemorrhagic fever (Ebola HF) in Gabon unknowingly became infected. When he later traveled to South Africa and was treated for Ebola HF in a hospital, the virus was transmitted to a nurse. She became ill and died. Because more and more people travel each year, outbreaks of these diseases are becoming an increasing threat in places where they rarely, if ever, have been seen before.
How are hemorrhagic fever viruses
transmitted?
Viruses causing hemorrhagic fever are initially transmitted to humans when the activities
of infected reservoir hosts or vectors and humans overlap. The viruses carried in rodent
reservoirs are transmitted when humans have contact with urine, fecal matter, saliva, or
other body excretions from infected rodents. The viruses associated with arthropod vectors
are spread most often when the vector mosquito or tick bites a human, or when a human
crushes a tick. However, some of these vectors may spread virus to animals, livestock, for
example. Humans then become infected when they care for or slaughter the animals.
Some viruses that cause hemorrhagic fever can spread from one person to another, once an initial person has become infected. Ebola , Marburg, Lassa and Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever viruses are examples. This type of secondary transmission of the virus can occur directly, through close contact with infected people or their body fluids. It can also occur indirectly, through contact with objects contaminated with infected body fluids. For example, contaminated syringes and needles have played an important role in spreading infection in outbreaks of Ebola hemorrhagic fever and Lassa fever .
What are the symptoms of viral
hemorrhagic fever illnesses?
Specific signs and symptoms vary by the type of VHF, but initial signs and symptoms often
include marked fever, fatigue, dizziness, muscle aches, loss of strength, and exhaustion.
Patients with severe cases of VHF often show signs of bleeding under the skin, in internal
organs, or from body orifices like the mouth, eyes, or ears. However, although they may
bleed from many sites around the body, patients rarely die because of blood loss. Severely
ill patients cases may also show shock, nervous system malfunction, coma, delirium, and
seizures. Some types of VHF are associated with renal (kidney) failure.
How are patients with viral
hemorrhagic fever treated?
Patients receive supportive therapy, but generally speaking, there is no other treatment
or established cure for VHFs. Ribavirin, an anti-viral drug, has been effective in
treating some individuals with Lassa fever or HFRS. Treatment with convalescent-phase
plasma has been used with success in some patients with Argentine hemorrhagic fever.
How can cases of viral hemorrhagic
fever be prevented and controlled?
With the exception of yellow fever and Argentine hemorrhagic fever, for which vaccines
have been developed, no vaccines exist that can protect against these diseases. Therefore,
prevention efforts must concentrate on avoiding contact with host species. If prevention
methods fail and a case of VHF does occur, efforts should focus on preventing further
transmission from person to person, if the virus can be transmitted in this way.
Because many of the hosts that carry hemorrhagic fever viruses are rodents, disease prevention efforts include
- controlling rodent populations;
- discouraging rodents from entering or living in homes or workplaces;
- encouraging safe cleanup of rodent nests and droppings.
For hemorrhagic fever viruses spread by arthropod vectors, prevention efforts often focus on community-wide insect and arthropod control. In addition, people are encouraged to use insect repellant, proper clothing, bednets, window screens, and other insect barriers to avoid being bitten.
For those hemorrhagic fever viruses that can be transmitted from one person to another, avoiding close physical contact with infected people and their body fluids is the most important way of controlling the spread of disease. Barrier nursing or infection control techniques include isolating infected individuals and wearing protective clothing. Other infection control recommendations include proper use, disinfection, and disposal of instruments and equipment used in treating or caring for patients with VHF, such as needles and thermometers.
In conjunction with the World Health Organization, CDC has developed practical, hospital-based guidelines, titled Infection Control for Viral Haemorrhagic Fevers In the African Health Care Setting. The manual can help health-care facilities recognize cases and prevent further hospital-based disease transmission using locally available materials and few financial resources.
What needs to be done to address
the threat of viral hemorrhagic fevers?
Scientists and researchers are challenged with developing containment, treatment, and
vaccine strategies for these diseases. Another goal is to develop immunologic and
molecular tools for more rapid disease diagnosis, and to study how the viruses are
transmitted and exactly how the disease affects the body (pathogenesis). A third goal is
to understand the ecology of these viruses and their hosts in order to offer preventive
public health advice for avoiding infection.
Special Pathogens
Branch
Division of Viral and Rickettsial Diseases, National Center for Infectious Diseases
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Public Health Service, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
National
Center for Infectious
Diseases
Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention
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