| Literature DB >> 22458265 |
Giuseppe Ippolito1, Heinz Feldmann, Simone Lanini, Francesco Vairo, Antonino Di Caro, Maria Rosaria Capobianchi, Emanuele Nicastri.
Abstract
The management of viral hemorrhagic fevers (VHFs) has mainly focused on strict infection control measures, while standard clinical interventions that are provided to patients with other life-threatening conditions are rarely offered to patients with VHFs. Despite its complexity, a proper clinical case management of VHFs is neither futile nor is it lacking in scientific rationale. Given that patient outcomes improve when treatment is started as soon as possible, development and implementation of protocols to promptly identify and treat patients in the earliest phases of diseases are urgently needed. Different pharmacological options have been proposed to manage patients and, as for other life-threatening conditions, advanced life support has been proved effective to address multiorgan failure. In addition, high throughput screening of small molecular libraries has emerged as a novel promising way to find new candidates drugs for VHFs therapy and a relevant number of new molecules are currently under investigation. Here we discuss the current knowledge about VHF clinical management to propose a way to step up the approach to VHFs beyond the mere application of infection control measures.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22458265 PMCID: PMC3325866 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7015-10-31
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Treatment options for viral hemorrhagic fevers
| Virus | Family | Incubation | Virulence | Communicability | Isolation | Treatment option(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ebola | 2 to 21 days | High | Yes | Yes | Post-exposure vaccination (rVSV); rNAPc2; siRNA | |
| Marburg | 2 to 21 days | High | Yes | Yes | Post-exposure vaccination (rVSV) | |
| Lassa | 6 to 21 days | Moderate | Yes | Yes | Ribavirin | |
| Lujo | 6 to 21 days | High | Yes | Yes | Ribavirin | |
| Junin | 6 to 21 days | Moderate | Yes | Yes | Passive immune therapy | |
| Machupo | 6 to 21 days | Moderate | Yes | Yes | Passive immune therapy | |
| Sabia | 6 to 21 days | Moderate | Unknown | Yes | ||
| Guanarito | 6 to 21 days | Moderate | Unknown | Yes | ||
| Chapare | 6 to 21 days | Unknown | Unknown | Yes | ||
| Nipah | 4 to 18 days | High | Potentiala | Yes | Passive immune therapy | |
| Hendra | 4 to 18 days | High | Unknown | Yes | Passive immune therapy | |
| CCHF | 3 to 7 days | Moderate | Yes | Yes | Ribavirin | |
| Rift Valley fever | 2 to 14 days | Low to moderate | No | No | Ribavirin | |
| Hantan, Seoul, and so on | Days to months | Low to moderate | No | No | Ribavirinn, hemodialysis | |
| Sin Nombre, Andes, and so on | Days to months | Moderate | Nob | Nob | ECMO | |
| Yellow fever | Flaviviridae | 3 to 6 days | Moderate | No | No | |
| Dengue | Flaviviridae | 3 to 14 days | Low | No | No | |
| RSSE | Flaviviridae | 7 to 14 days | Moderate | No | No | |
| Omsk/KFD/AHF | Flaviviridae | 3 to 8 days | Moderate | Unknown | Yes |
aHuman-to-human transmission has been reported from outbreaks in Bangladesh.
bAndes virus has been reported to be transmissible from human to human; isolation may be indicated.
AHFV = Alkhurma hemorrhagic fever; CCHF = Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever; ECMO = extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; KFD = Kyasanur Forest disease; RSSE = Russian spring-summer encephalitis; rVSV = recombinant vesicular stomatitis virus; siRNA = small interfering RNA molecule.