| Literature DB >> 28265442 |
Abstract
Lassa fever, a zoonotic viral infection, is endemic in West Africa. The disease causes annual wide spread morbidity and mortality in Africa, and can be imported by travelers. Possible importation of Lassa fever and the potential for the use of Lassa virus as an agent of bioterrorism mandate clinicians in Israel and other countries to be vigilant and familiar with the basic characteristics of this disease. The article reviews the basis of this infection and the clinical management of patients with Lassa fever. Special emphasis is given to antiviral treatment and infection control.Entities:
Keywords: Arenavirus; Bioterrorism; Lassa fever; Lassa virus; Ribavirin
Year: 2016 PMID: 28265442 PMCID: PMC5330145 DOI: 10.1186/s40696-016-0018-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Disaster Mil Med ISSN: 2054-314X
Mortality rate in LF patients treated with ribavirin [39]
| Risk group | Treatment onset (days from symptom onset) | Mortality rate | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No treatment (%) | Oral ribavirin (%) | Intravenous ribavirin (%) | ||
| AST >150 IU | All cases | 55 | 14* | 19* |
| Within 6 days | 61 | 20* | 5* | |
| After >7 days | 52 | 11* | 26* | |
| Viremia >103.6 TCID50 | All cases | 76 | 30* | 32* |
| Within 6 days | 75 | 20* | 9* | |
| After >7 days | 78 | 40* | 47* | |
| Viremia <103.6 TCID50 | All cases | 28 | 7* | 9* |
AST aspartate transaminase, TCID 50 % Tissue culture inhibitory dose
* Significantly lower than mortality with no treatment