A new study had shown that the survivors of the Ebola
virus disease suffer from brain impairments months after their initial
infection. The virus "penetrates into the brain and causes lasting
symptoms", says neurologist Lauren Bowen from the National Institute of
Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) in the United States.
Bowen and her colleagues
travelled to Liberia to examine a group of people who survived the virus at
least six months after their initial infection, and then follow them up over
time.
This neurological study is
part of a larger research project on Ebola survivors, known as Prevail III.
Several medical teams - including eye doctors, infectious disease specialists
and internal medicine doctors - will study other symptoms.
Out of 82 patients, two were
suicidal and one had "active hallucinations", say the researchers,
who will present preliminary results of the study at the annual meeting of the
American Academy of Neurology, in Canada in April.
These symptoms were
"striking to all physicians involved and certainly surprising in young
patients", Bowen tells SciDev.Net. The average age of those examined was
around 35.
"tease out" if the symptoms are due to Ebola or
to other infections, says neurologist Bridgette Billioux, also from NINDS. She
is travelling to Liberia this week to carry out this part of the research.
The findings show "high levels of mental
and neurological problems", says Jimmy Whitworth, an infectious disease
epidemiologist at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine in the
United Kingdom, who praises the study as "very important".
"A cohort study of this type is challenging to
do, but is the most rigorous way to study the problems of Ebola
survivors," he says.
Since the conference abstract
was submitted, the number of survivors in this study has doubled to reach 164,
says Billioux. In all, about 17,000 people were infected with the Ebola virus
during the recent West African outbreak and survived. Another 11,000 died of
the disease.
source: SciDev.Net
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