Anonymous ID: b8caa6 March 17, 2021, 12:18 p.m. No.13244427   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4658 >>4714 >>4784

>>13244400

Interesting, 'rona not scary enough for people so bring back something actually scary… 2nd story about this virus I've seen in the last few days.

 

Ebola may have lingered in a survivor for 5 years before sparking new outbreak

 

A person who survived the major Ebola outbreak in West Africa between 2014 and 2016 may have harbored the virus for five years before it hopped to another person and triggered the current outbreak in Guinea, according to a new analysis.

 

Scientists previously knew that the Ebola virus could hide out in the bodies of survivors, especially in "privileged" areas of the body where the immune system is less active, such as in the eyeballs or the testes, Live Science previously reported. That means that the person could shed the virus for some time after recovering from the deadly infection; and in rare occasions, that person could transmit it to others. The longest a person has been known to shed the Ebola virus was 500 days, according to STAT News.

 

But a new analysis suggests that the Ebola virus can not only hide out for much longer than that, but it may also have the ability to spark brand-new outbreaks. To analyze the current Ebola outbreak in Guinea, which has now infected 18 people and killed nine, Guinea's Ministry of Health sent three samples of the current variant to the World Health Organization's laboratory at the Institut Pasteur de Dakar in Senegal.

 

There, researchers sequenced the samples to figure out the exact genes that make up its genome, and then they compared that with previous Ebola virus variants. They found that the current variant is very similar to the 2014 "Makona variant" that caused the West Africa outbreak in 2014 to 2016 and killed more than 11,000 people across Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.

In fact, the new variant only had about a dozen genetic differences, which is "far less than what would be expected during sustained human-to-human transmission," the researchers wrote in the analysis published to the discussion forum virological.org on Friday (March 12) and not yet peer-reviewed.

 

Had the virus been silently being spread from person-to-person since the West Africa outbreak, it would have likely evolved more than 100 different mutations in the past five years, according to the report. Rather, it's likely that this virus lingered in the body of someone who was infected during the previous outbreak five years ago and it hopped to another person, such as through sexual transmission, prompting the current outbreak, according to the analysis.

 

The virus can linger in pockets around the body and can infect others on rare occasions, according to STAT. Such transmission typically occurs when a male survivor infects a female through sexual contact, according to STAT.

 

Sauce -

https://www.foxnews.com/health/ebola-may-have-lingered-survivor-5-years-before-sparking-new-outbreak

Anonymous ID: b8caa6 March 17, 2021, 12:59 p.m. No.13244647   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4657

>>13243896 (pb/lb)

This anon may have been on to something.

 

Steve Herman born in Cinci

 

Career

 

Herman, who was born in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1959, worked as a print and broadcast reporter for the Associated Press in West Virginia and Washington, D.C. before returning to Japan in 1990 as a reporter/producer for "Asia Now," which aired weekly on PBS. From 1996 to 2000, he was the senior executive in Japan for the parent company of Discovery Channel and Animal Planet. Herman was elected for five consecutive years (1998-2002) to serve as Chairman of The Foreign Press in Japan (FPIJ) after completing a one-year term as President of the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan (FCCJ). For the 2005–6 term, he was again on the FCCJ Board of Directors and continued to serve as the radio representative on the FPIJ Executive Committee until his assignment to South Asia.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_L._Herman