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Old 08-21-2014, 03:32 PM   #91
Lucille
Maybe we could start a zombie thread?
I'm kinda feeling my comments on the the zombie stuff is getting to be a hijack, Ebola is real, zombies are not, even if Brad Pitt was involved.
 
Old 08-21-2014, 05:18 PM   #92
rcarichter
Quote:
Originally Posted by AbsoluteApril View Post
I thought the idea of a tiny bit of blood being all it takes for the infection to set in as seen in 24 days later was very well done.

I was kinda hoping to hear why you guys liked WWZ so much? oh well.
Brad Pitt. Really, that's about it in a nutshell.

Any other trivia fans out there? I've had the question come up at more than one trivia event, regarding the difference between regular zombies and the ones in 28 Days Later. (The latter are not dead; just infected)
 
Old 08-22-2014, 01:59 PM   #93
j_dunlavy
Quote:
Originally Posted by j_dunlavy View Post
there is someone being tested for ebola in a south Sacramento (CA) Kaiser, so, yeah...
the patient tested negative
 
Old 08-22-2014, 03:21 PM   #94
WebSlave
Yeah, can't wait for flu season to set in. Seems like most virus infections start out pretty much the same, except with Ebola you just tag onto the end of symptoms "and then you die."

So anyone with flu symptoms will likely be treated like a leper by everyone else.
 
Old 08-28-2014, 04:23 PM   #95
j_dunlavy
interesting stuff:

http://www.vox.com/2014/8/28/6071071/ebola-sequencing

Text:
Scientists found the origins of the Ebola outbreak — by tracking its mutations

Updated by Susannah Locke on August 28, 2014, 2:00 p.m. ET @susannahlocke susannah@vox.com
Tweet (178) Share (48) +1 LinkedIn (2) Email Print
Sierra Leone government burial team members wearing protective clothing carry the coffin of Dr Modupeh Cole, Sierra Leone's second senior physician to die of Ebola. Carl De Souza/AFP/Getty Images
Don't miss stories. Follow Vox!

One of the big mysteries in the Ebola outbreak in West Africa is where the virus came from in the first place — and whether it's changed in any significant ways. These unanswered questions could be making it more difficult to diagnose the disease and find treatments.

"A new analysis could help show if Ebola is changing over time"

Now scientists are starting to get some answers. In a new paper in Science, researchers reveal that they have sequenced the genomes of Ebola from 78 patients in Sierra Leone who contracted the disease in May and June. Those sequences revealed some 300 mutations specific to this outbreak.

The new analysis could help determine if the virus' behavior has changed — and provide information for future diagnostic tests and treatments.

Among their findings, the researchers discovered that the current viral strains come from a related strain that left Central Africa within the past ten years. And the research confirms that the virus likely spread into Sierra Leone when women became infected after attending the funeral of a traditional healer who had been treating Guinean Ebola patients.

The current Ebola outbreak in West Africa is the worst on record. It has hit four countries, including Sierra Leone, infected approximately 3,000, and killed about 1,500 people. And so far, there is no sign of it slowing down.

The fact that the researchers were able to sequence the Ebola genomes in mere months is remarkable — a contrast to the typically slow pace of scientific research. "We’re trying to do this as fast as possible," says co-senior author Pardis Sabeti, a biologist at MIT and Harvard. This new data increases the number of public Ebola virus sequences fourfold.

The main impact of the paper will be as the foundation of research for years to come as other projects try to sort out what all of these genetic sequences — and their hundreds of mutations — really mean.

The paper is also a sad reminder of the toll that the virus has taken on those working on the front lines. Five of the authors died of Ebola before it was published. All were affiliated with Kenema Government Hospital in Sierra Leone.
What genetic sequences can tell us about Ebola
Ebola tree lineage

(Gire, SK, et al. Science, August 28, 2014.)

Viruses randomly mutate over time. This is completely normal for viruses, and there's no reason to think that Ebola's mutation rate is anything weird or unusual.

"Scientists can use mutations as markers TO track where Ebola has traveled AND WHEN"

Scientists can use these mutations as markers to piece together how the Ebola virus has traveled from person to person. Because they know the general mutation rate of the virus, they can also pin down the dates of when the disease spread.

So what has this analysis revealed? Using genetic sequences from current and previous outbreaks, the researchers mapped out a family tree that puts a common ancestor of the recent West African outbreak some place in Central Africa roughly around 2004. This contradicts an earlier hypothesis that the virus had been hanging around West Africa for much longer than that.

The data, on the whole, supports what epidemiologists have already deduced about how the virus spread into Sierra Leone. More than a dozen women became infected after attending the funeral of a traditional healer who had been treating Guinean Ebola patients and contracted the disease.

One surprise from the paper is that two different strains of Ebola came out of that funeral. This suggests that either the healer was infected with two different strains or that another person at the funeral was already infected.

As Ebola then traveled across Sierra Leone, a third strain of the virus appeared.
Why having Ebola gene sequences is helpful

Some Ebola diagnostic tests have been designed to detect areas that have mutated in the Ebola virus samples from this outbreak, raising the possibility these tests might be losing accuracy. One of the things Sabeti plans to do next is test whether that's actually the case.

"Diagnosing Ebola is more difficult than it sounds"

Diagnosing Ebola can actually be more difficult than it might sound. The disease often looks like a lot of other feverish illnesses that can be common. And at a later stage, only some patients end up bleeding.

However, it's essential to know who has it as soon as possible, especially so that health-care workers can use appropriate procedures to prevent transmission to themselves and others. So accurate diagnostic tests are absolutely needed.

Researchers are also planning to study the mutations to see if any of them are affecting Ebola's recent behavior. The number of mutations found is completely normal, and it isn't necessarily the case that they'll have a big effect. But it's possible that something intriguing could turn up.

For example, this outbreak has had a higher transmission rate and lower death rate than others, and researchers are curious if any of these mutations are related to that. (Right now, social factors are thought to be the main causes of these two changes.)

"It sets the stage for the next few years of research that will reveal the differences between this virus and previous versions of Ebola virus," says Erica Ollmann Saphire, who researches Ebola and similar viruses at The Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California.

"My laboratory will be using this sequence information to understand the molecular effects of these mutations," she says. "We will also be looking at our pool of antibody therapeutics beyond ZMapp to ensure that candidate cocktails are optimally effective against these circulating strains."

Those working on other long-term projects involving vaccines should also find this information helpful.
The longer Ebola circulates, the more opportunities it has to change — possibly for the worse

Although Ebola's mutation rate itself isn't anything unusual, the longer it's circulating in people, the more chances it will have to randomly come up with a mutation that it will find beneficial — possibly to the detriment of human health.

"You never want to give a virus that kind of opportunity," Sabeti says. "We hope that this work opens up new doors for more people to work together to stop this virus now."
Card 1 of 11 Launch cards
Why is Ebola suddenly in the news?

The deadliest Ebola outbreak in recorded history is happening right now. The outbreak is unprecedented both in the number of people who have gotten sick and in geographic scope. And so far, it's been a long battle that doesn't appear to be slowing down.

The Ebola virus has now hit four countries: Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Nigeria.

The virus — which starts off with flu-like symptoms and sometimes ends with bleeding — has infected about 3,000 people and killed more than 1,500 since this winter, according to estimates on August 28 from the World Health Organization.

Ebola is both rare and very deadly. Since the first outbreak in 1976, Ebola viruses have infected thousands of people and killed roughly 60 percent of them. Symptoms can come on quickly and kill fast.

Journalist David Quammen put it well in a recent New York Times op-ed: "Ebola is more inimical to humans than perhaps any known virus on Earth, except rabies and HIV-1. And it does its damage much faster than either."
Screen_Shot_2014-08-28_at_12.07.40_PM.0.png

Each bar here represents a different Ebola outbreak. The data is what the CDC has on record. Not every case or death always gets officially recorded, so there is always some wiggle room in numbers like these. The 2014 bar is the WHO's estimate of the current outbreak as of August 28, 2014.
The 2014 Ebola outbreak 11 Cards / Edited By Susannah Locke Updated Aug 28 2014, 12:22p
 
Old 09-02-2014, 02:18 PM   #96
Dennis Hultman
Another American Doctor Infected With Ebola
http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/ebo...y-says-n193911

Quote:
SIM USA said the doctor, who was not named, was treating obstetric patients at ELWA hospital in Monrovia and had not treated Ebola patients in the hospital’s isolation unit, which is separate from the main hospital. The charity said it was not yet known how the doctor was infected, but he immediately isolated himself when he showed symptoms.
 
Old 09-02-2014, 02:19 PM   #97
Dennis Hultman
CDC Director: Ebola Outbreak ‘Is Spiraling Out Of Control’

http://atlanta.cbslocal.com/2014/09/...ut-of-control/

Quote:
ATLANTA (CBS Atlanta/AP) — The director for the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention says that the Ebola outbreak is going to get worse.

Speaking to “CBS This Morning” following his trip to the West African countries dealing with the outbreak, Dr. Tom Frieden explained that they have to act now to try to get Ebola under control.

“It is the world’s first Ebola epidemic and it is spiraling out of control. It’s bad now and it’s going to get worse in the very near future,” Frieden told CBS News. “There is still a window of opportunity to tamp it down, but that window is closing. We really have to act now.”
 
Old 09-02-2014, 02:25 PM   #98
Dennis Hultman
World 'losing battle' to contain Ebola
http://news.yahoo.com/world-losing-b...145522273.html

Quote:
International medical agency Medecins sans Frontieres said Tuesday the world was "losing the battle" to contain Ebola as the United Nations warned of severe food shortages in the hardest-hit countries.

MSF told a UN briefing in New York that world leaders were failing to address the epidemic and called for an urgent global biological disaster response to get aid and personnel to west Africa
____________________________

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worl...h-of-food.html

Ebola patient escapes quarantine centre in search of food
A man suspected of suffering from Ebola has been filmed trying to run away from doctors in protective clothing, before he is bundled into a truck and driven away
 
Old 09-02-2014, 04:01 PM   #99
rcarichter
Ebola is quite debilitating. The escapee story make you wonder how many non-Ebola patients are being held in these centers, then contract the disease while they're there. Seems like getting up and running would indicate a lesser illness.

Noelle
 
Old 09-02-2014, 08:38 PM   #100
WebSlave
So what is the average mortality rate at this point?

Anyone want to multiply that times the population of the entire world?

Yeah, I've heard some say that Ebola wouldn't have the same lethality in industrialized countries like it does in backwoods African countries because the health care and support is so much better. Well, maybe, maybe not. At least not if it can be contained before all medical and first responder resources get overwhelmed and we BECOME a third world country virtually overnight.

I was reading something the other night talking about the number of mutations Ebola has already had since taking up this recent relatively long term residency in human hosts. The fear was that Ebola was going to hone it's ability to spread more rapidly among human hosts as it fine tuned it's genetics to link more tightly with that of humans. Sounds like a lot of wild cards being thrown onto the table.
 

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