Description
Viral hemorrhagic fevers are a group of febrile illnesses caused by several distinct families of viruses, all of which are enveloped and have RNA genomes. These groups include Ebola and Marburg viruses, Lassa fever virus, the New World arenaviruses (Guanarito, Machupo, Junin, and Sabia), and Rift Valley fever and Crimean Congo hemorrhagic fever viruses (1-3). Although some types cause relatively mild illnesses, many of these viruses can cause severe, life-threatening disease. Severe illness is characterized by vascular damage and increased permeability, multiorgan failure, and shock. (See also the Dengue and Yellow Fever sections of this chapter.)
EBOLA AND MARBURG: FILOVIRAL DISEASES
Ebola and Marburg are filoviruses that belong to the family Filoviridae and can cause severe hemorrhagic fever in humans and nonhuman primates. Four species of Ebola virus have been identified: Côte d’Ivoire, Sudan, Zaire, and Reston (3). Ebola-Reston infection is fatal in monkeys, but no disease has been reported in humans. Confirmed cases of Ebola hemorrhagic fever have been reported in the Congo, Côte d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo, Gabon, Sudan, and Uganda. Occupational infection of laboratory workers resulting from needle-stick injury has been documented in England and Russia. Marburg virus also is indigenous to Africa. Although the precise geographic range for Marburg virus is unknown, it includes at least parts of Uganda, western Kenya, Democratic Republic of Congo, Angola, and possibly Zimbabwe. The reservoir hosts for Ebola and Marburg viruses have not yet been identified. Outbreaks can occur when an index case-patient who has been exposed to that unknown reservoir species or an infected nonhuman primate transmits the virus to others in a community (4,5). Within that community, the outbreak often becomes amplified in the health-care setting.
LASSA FEVER: ARENAVIRAL DISEASES
Lassa fever is caused by a virus transmitted from asymptomatically infected rodents to humans (6). Most infections are mild, but some are severe, causing a hemorrhagic fever that is often fatal. The virus, a member of the virus family Arenaviridae, is a single-stranded RNA virus. Arenaviruses are transmitted by rodent hosts (with the exception of Tacaribe virus, which has been isolated from bats) and can be divided into two groups: the New World or Tacaribe complex and the Old World or lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV)/Lassa complex. Viruses causing human illness are Lassa virus (Lassa fever), Junin virus (Argentine hemorrhagic fever), Machupo virus (Bolivian hemorrhagic fever), Guanarito virus (Venezuelan hemorrhagic fever) (7), Sabia virus (Brazilian hemorrhagic fever), LCMV (meningitis, encephalitis, meningo-encephalitis, congenital fetal infection with neurological sequelae, fever, coagulopathy, and multi-organ failure and death in immunosuppressed organ recipients), and Flexal virus (an influenza-like illness that has caused deaths among laboratory personnel handling infected rodents in Brazil) (1).
Each virus is associated with one or more closely related rodent species that constitute its natural reservoir. Tacaribe complex viruses are generally associated with the New World rats and mice (family Muridae, subfamily Sigmodontinae). The LCM/Lassa complex viruses are associated with the Old World rats and mice (family Muridae, subfamily Murinae). Taken together, these types of rodents are located across most of the earth’s land mass, including Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas, although the individual viruses (with the exception of LCMV) are restricted to limited geographic areas.
Lassa fever is limited to rural areas of West Africa, with areas of hyperendemicity in eastern Sierra Leone, Guinea, Liberia, and Nigeria (6). Peridomestic exposure to infected rodents is the most likely source of human infection. Transmission of arenaviruses to humans can occur via inhalation of primary aerosols from rodent urine, by ingestion of rodent-contaminated food, or by direct contact of broken skin with rodent excreta (1,6). Rodent infestation facilitated by inappropriate food storage increases the risk of human infection. Person-to-person spread of Lassa and Machupo viruses has also been described, most notably by large droplet and contact transmission in the hospital setting. Despite one anecdotal report of possible airborne transmission, this mode is not believed to be an important route of infection from person to person. Laboratory handling of infectious specimens and contact with contaminated medical equipment are also associated with transmission.
RIFT VALLEY FEVER AND RELATED BUNYAVIRAL DISEASES
Rift Valley fever (RVF) is caused by a member of the Bunyaviridae family; it affects primarily livestock and may also infect humans. It is transmitted by several means, including the bites of mosquitoes, percutaneous inoculation, or exposure to aerosols from contaminated blood or fluids of infected animals (2,8). Other diseases caused by viruses of the family Bunyaviridae include Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS), hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS), and Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever. Both HPS and HFRS are transmitted to humans through contact with urine, feces, or saliva of infected rodents (9,10). Crimean-Congo virus is transmitted to humans by infected ticks or direct handling and preparation of fresh carcasses of infected animals, usually domestic livestock (2). Nosocomial transmission of Crimean-Congo virus has frequently been reported.
RVF virus is endemic to sub-Saharan Africa, where sporadic outbreaks occur in humans, for example, in the Nile Delta, Egypt (1978 and 1993), Madagascar (1991), and the lower Senegal River basin of Mauritania (1987) (2). A large epidemic also occurred in Kenya and Tanzania during 1997-1998. A recent outbreak (2000) of RVF occurred in southwestern Saudi Arabia and Yemen with a strain of RVF closely related to that of the 1997-1998 East African strain (8). This outbreak represented the first spread of the virus outside Africa, demonstrating its potential for spread to unaffected regions elsewhere in the tropics. Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF) is endemic where ticks of the genus Hyalomma are found in Africa and Eurasia, including South Africa, the Balkans, the Middle East, Russia, and western China (2). Recent cases of CCHF have been confirmed in Oman (1995), United Arab Emirates (1979 and 1994), and Saudi Arabia (1990). The disease is highly endemic in Pakistan, Iran, and Turkey . The viruses that cause HPS are present in the New World (9); those that cause HFRS occur worldwide (10).