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| Ebola virus
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An electron micrograph showing the filamentous structure of the viral particle. The filaments are 60-80 nm in diameter. | ||||||||||
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Ivory Coast ebolavirus Reston ebolavirus Sudan ebolavirus Zaire virus |
Ebola was first discovered in 1976, and since its discovery, different strands of Ebola have caused epidemics with 50 to 90 percent mortality in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Gabon, Uganda and Sudan.
The virus comes from the Filoviridae family, of which the Marburg virusThe Marburg virus is the causative agent of Marburg hemorrhagic fever . Both the disease and virus are related to Ebola and originate in a similar area ( Uganda and western Kenya). Its source is a zoonose of unknown origin. This virus was first documented is also a member. It is named after the Ebola RiverThe Ebola River in northern Democratic Republic of the Congo, is the headstream of the Mongala River (a tributary of the Zaire River, formerly named the Congo River). The Ebola virus is named for this river. African rivers. in ZaireZaire was the name between 1971 and 1997 of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The Belgian Congo became independent in 1960 as the "Republic of the Congo", the same name as its neighbour the former French colony of Congo. The title Democratic Republic, AfricaAfrica is the world's second-largest continent in both area and population, after Asia. 30,244,050 km2 (11,677,240 mi2) including the islands, it covers 20. 3% of the total land area on Earth, and with over 800 million human inhabitants it accounts for ar, near where the first outbreak was noted by Dr. Ngoy MusholaNgoy Mushola is a doctor from Bumba, Zaire. He recorded the first description of the Ebola virus in a town named Yambuku. in 1976 after a significant outbreak in Yambuku , ZaireZaire was the name between 1971 and 1997 of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The Belgian Congo became independent in 1960 as the "Republic of the Congo", the same name as its neighbour the former French colony of Congo. The title Democratic Republic (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo), and Nzara , in western Sudan. Of 602 identified cases, there were 397 deaths.
The two strains identified in 1976 were named Ebola–Zaïre (EBO–Z) and Ebola–Sudan (EBO–S). The outbreak in Sudan showed a lower fatality rate — 50% — compared to the 90% mortality rate of the Zaïre strain. In 1990, a second, similar virus was identified in Reston, Virginia among monkeys imported from the Philippines, and was named Ebola–Reston. This strain seemed to be spread through the air, but did not cause any human fatalities; although four men did test positive for the virus, none became ill.
Further outbreaks have occurred in Zaire/Democratic Republic of the Congo ( 1995 and 2003), Gabon ( 1994, 1995 and 1996), Uganda ( 2000), and Sudan again ( 2004). A new subtype was identified from a single human case in the Côte d'Ivoire in 1994, EBO–CI.
Of around 1500 identified Ebola cases worldwide, two-thirds of the patients have died. The animal (or other) reservoir which sustains the virus between outbreaks has not been identified.