How Do You Get Ebola?
You can get Ebola by coming into contact with the blood or body fluids of an animal or person who is infected.
People
often get sick with Ebola when they care for or bury a person who has
the disease. Someone also can catch the virus by touching contaminated
needles or surfaces.
What Are the Symptoms of Ebola?
Symptoms
of the Ebola virus show up 2 to 21 days after someone is infected. As
the virus spreads through the body's cells, it damages the immune system
and organs. Ultimately, Ebola causes levels of blood-clotting cells,
called platelets, to fall, which can lead to severe bleeding.
Many of the early symptoms of Ebola look like the flu or other mild illnesses. They include:
- Fever
- Headache
- Muscle aches
- Sore throat
- Weakness
- Diarrhea
As the disease gets worse, people who are infected may develop:
- Bleeding inside and outside of the body
- Rash
- Trouble breathing
How Can You Tell if Someone Has Ebola?
Sometimes it's hard to tell if a person has Ebola from the symptoms alone.
Doctors may first test for other diseases that have the same symptoms as Ebola, such as:
- Cholera
- Hepatitis
- Malaria
- Meningitis
- Typhoid fever
Tests of the blood and tissues, such as the ELISA test, also can help diagnose Ebola.
If someone might have Ebola, they should be isolated from the public immediately to help prevent the spread of Ebola.
How Is Ebola Treated?
Right now there is no real treatment or cure for Ebola. Doctors try to manage people's symptoms by giving them:
- Fluids and electrolytes through a vein
- Nutrition
- Oxygen
- Treatment is primarily supportive in nature and includes minimizing invasive procedures, balancing fluids and electrolytes to counter dehydration, administration of anticoagulants early in infection to prevent or control disseminated intravascular coagulation, administration of procoagulants late in infection to control hemorrhaging, maintaining oxygen levels, pain management, and administration of antibiotics or antimycotics to treat secondary infections
How Can You Prevent Ebola?
Although there is no vaccine to prevent Ebola but people can avoid catching the disease by not traveling to areas where the virus is found.
Health
care workers can prevent infection by wearing masks, gloves, and
goggles whenever they come into contact with people who may have Ebola.
What Causes an Ebola outbreak?
Usually
an outbreak starts when someone comes into contact with the body fluids
or waste of infected animals, such as monkeys, chimps, or fruit bats.
Once a person is infected, he or she can then spread it to others.
There are five different types of Ebola virus that cause the disease. Four of them are known to cause the disease in humans.
The Ebola virus first appeared during two 1976 outbreaks in Africa.
Ebola
gets its name from the Ebola River, which is near one of the villages
in the Democratic Republic of Congo where the disease first appeared.
No comments:
Post a Comment