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Introduction
The viral hemorrhagic fevers (VHF's) are a group
of clinical febrile illnesses with a propensity to
cause significant bleeding. These illnesses are caused
by a group of RNA viruses which belong to four distinct
viral families: Filoviridae, Arenaviridae, Bunyaviridae,
and Flaviviridae. The two viruses considered to be
the greatest bioterrorism threats are Ebola and Marburg, the
two members of the filovirus family, which are
categorized as category A bioweapon agents. These viruses
characteristically cause high mortality and morbidity,
are person to person spread, are highly infectious
at a low dose by the aerosol route, are stable in the
environment, and large-scale production is feasible.
Other viruses which could conceivably be used as terrorist
weapons, but not considered as great a threat as the
filoviruses, include:
Arenaviruses: Lassa Fever (Africa) and the New
World Hemorrhagic Fevers - Bolivian Hemorrhagic Fever
(BHF, Machupo virus), Argentine Hemorrhagic Fever (AHF,
Junin virus), Venezuelan Hemorrhagic Fever (Guanarito
virus), and Brazilian Hemorrhagic Fever (Sabia virus)
Bunyaviruses: Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic
Fever (CCHF), Rift Valley Fever (RVF)
Flaviviruses: Dengue, Yellow Fever, Omsk
Hemorrhagic Fever, and Kyasanur Forest disease
State biological weapons programs have shown interest
in hemorrhagic fever viruses (HFV's) as weapons; the
former Soviet Union weaponized significant quantities
of Marburg, Ebola, Lassa, Junin, and Machupo. The Aum
Shinrikyo cult in Japan attempted to gain access to
Ebola during the Kikwit, Zaire Ebola outbreak in the
mid-90's.
Natural outbreaks of disease from these viruses have
demonstrated their potential as deadly weapons and
their ability to spread from person to person in some
cases. The reservoir of several of the HFV's is either
rodents or insects (ticks or mosquitoes); the reservoir(s)
of Ebola and Marburg are unknown. In natural outbreaks
of Ebola and Marburg, contact precautions have been
sufficient to interrupt person-to-person spread. Airborne
precautions have not been necessary, although some
animal studies have raised concern about spread via
small-particle aerosols.
Clinical Features
Clinical manifestations of VHF's vary according to
the specific etiologic virus and may overlap, making
specific clinical diagnosis unlikely. The incubation
period varies from 2 to 21 days, and may be inoculum
dependent. Prodromal symptoms are typical, with several
days of fever, myalgias, headache, malaise, arthralgias,
nausea, diarrhea, and abdominal pain. With some VHF's,
such as CCHF, abdominal pain may be pronounced, mimicking
an acute abdomen. All VHF's are characterized by an
abrupt onset of symptoms, with the exception of the
arenaviruses, where onset is more insidious.
After the prodrome, patients may develop conjunctivitis
and pharyngitis, and most VHF patients have a rash,
with the dermal manifestations varying by etiology.
As these diseases progress, patients may exhibit a
progressively worsening bleeding diathesis, with petechiae,
conjunctival and mucosal hemorrhage, hematuria, hematemesis,
and melena, followed by DIC and hypotension. As the
patient worsens, CNS signs ensue, including delirium,
seizures, and coma. Shock and multiple organ system
failure presage death.
Case fatality rates vary according to the viral etiology,
ranging from less than 5 percent to approximately 70
to 90 percent with Ebola Zaire subtype.
Evacuation for ICU care during the incubation period
is acceptable; after onset of symptoms it is not advisable.
Epidemiologic Indicators: With natural cases,
historical risk factors such as travel to Africa, Asia,
or South America, or exposure to other patients may
be present. In nature, most of these infections are
spread by nosocomial or close personal contact with
other victims, or by exposure to insect vectors. In
a bioterrorism attack, patients may have common geographic
factors, which may indicate simultaneous (aerosol)
exposure. Presence of these viruses outside their normal
range, and high attack and mortality rates may indicate
non-natural exposure.
Diagnosis and Treatment
Presenting Symptoms (Clinical Diagnosis)
- Fever
- Malaise
- Erythematous Rash or Flushing (early)
- Conjunctivitis
- Pharyngitis
- Myalgias
- Abdominal Pain
- Nausea and/or Diarrhea
- Petechiae and Hemorrhagic Rash/Purpura (late)
- Hematemeis, Hemoptysis, Epistaxis, Hematochezia,
or Melena
- Hypotension
- Signs of CNS Dysfunction: Seizures, Delirium, Coma
Laboratory Clinical Diagnostic Testing (Blood,
Urine): WBC with Differential, Platelet Count,
PT/PTT and Bleeding Time, LFT's, Fibrin Split Products,
Fibrinogen, UA and BUN/Creatinine, Electrolytes,
Glucose, and pH and bicarbonate levels (acid/base
status).
Specific Diagnostic Testing (only available at
specialized laboratories): Antigen-Capture ELISA,
RT-PCR (most useful clinically), IgM by Antibody-Capture
ELISA, Viral isolation (requires BSL-4 laboratory
- CDC or USAMRIID), acute and convalescent IgG serologies
in survivors (only helpful retrospectively)
Differential Diagnosis: Viral Hepatitis, Gram-negative
sepsis, Toxic Shock Syndrome, Meningococcemia, other
bacterial sepsis, Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever or other
rickettsial disease, leptospirosis, borreliosis, Dengue
Hemorrhagic Fever (DHF), malaria, septicemic plague,
hemorrhagic smallpox.
Isolation: Strict VHF-specific barrier precautions
initiated on suspicion of VHF disease. See guidelines
in JAMA 2002, May 8: 287; 2391-2405, or at the CDC
bioterrorism web site:
http://www.bt.cdc.gov/agent/vhf/index.asp
Also airborne precautions and a negative-pressure
isolation room are recommended, if such a room is available.
Close medical surveillance for all those with close
or high-risk contact or blood exposure within 21 days
of a patient's onset of symptoms. Convalescent patients
should refrain from sexual activity for 3 months (filoviral
or arenaviral infections).
Decontamination: Environmental surfaces and
contaminated equipment - 1:10 to 1:100 dilution of
household bleach (hypochlorite) or other EPA-registered
disinfectant. Linens should be handled per CDC guidelines.
Treatment:
Intensive Supportive Care
Intravenous IND Ribavirin therapy (available from
CDC or USAMRIID) - recommended for VHF of unknown etiology
while diagnostic confirmation is pending VHF known
to be due to Arenaviruses or Bunyaviruses (Ribavirin
has efficacy against Lassa Fever, some new world Arenaviruses
such as AHF, CCHF, RVF, and HFRS). See guidelines for
dosing in JAMA 2002 May 8; 287:2391-2405 or at web
link: http://jama.ama-assn.org/issues/v287n18/ffull/jst20006.html
The main side effect is a reversible hemolytic anemia.
Ribavirin has no efficacy against Filoviruses or Flaviviruses,
and is contraindicated in pregnancy.
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