Thursday, 14 January 2016

About 15-20% of hospitalized Lassa fever patients will die from the illness. The overall mortality rate is estimated to be 1%, but during epidemics, mortality can climb as high as 50%. The mortality rate is greater than 80% when it occurs in pregnant women during their third trimester; fetal death also occurs in nearly all those cases. Abortion decreases the risk of death to the mother. Some survivors experience lasting effects of the disease.
Because of treatment with ribavirin, fatality rates are continuing to decline.

Related Posts:

  • Diagnosis A range of laboratory investigations are performed to diagnose the disease and assess its course and complications. An ELISA test for antigen and IgM antibodies give 88% sensitivity and 90% specificity for the presence of th… Read More
  • Prevention Control of the Mastomys rodent population is impractical, so measures are limited to keeping rodents out of homes and food supplies, as well as maintaining effective personal hygiene. Gloves, masks, laboratory coats, and gog… Read More
  • Prognosis About 15-20% of hospitalized Lassa fever patients will die from the illness. The overall mortality rate is estimated to be 1%, but during epidemics, mortality can climb as high as 50%. The mortality rate is greater than 80% … Read More
  • Causes Lassa virus is zoonotic (transmitted from animals), in that it spreads to humans from rodents, specifically multimammate mice (Mastomys natalensis). This is probably the most common mouse in equatorial Africa, ubiquitous in … Read More
  • Epidemiology The dissemination of the infection can be assessed by prevalence of antibodies to the virus in populations of: *.Sierra Leone - 8–52% *.Guinea - 4–55% *.Nigeria - about 21% Lassa fever is a viral hemorrhagic fever in West Af… Read More

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Translate

Popular Posts

Blog Archive