Filoviruses
What are filoviruses?
Filoviruses belong to a virus family called
Filoviridae and can cause severe hemorrhagic
fever in humans and nonhuman primates. So far,
only two members of this virus family have been
identified: Marburg virus and Ebola virus. Four
species of Ebola virus have been identified:
Ivory Coast, Sudan, Zaire, and Reston.
Ebola-Reston is the only known filovirus that
does not cause severe disease in humans;
however, it can be fatal in monkeys.
Structurally, filovirus virions (complete viral
particles) may appear in several shapes, a
biological feature called pleomorphism. These
shapes include long, sometimes branched
filaments, as well as shorter filaments shaped
like a "6", a "U", or a circle. Viral filaments
may measure up to 14,000 nanometers in length,
have a uniform diameter of 80 nanometers, and
are enveloped in a lipid (fatty) membrane. Each
virion contains one molecule of single-stranded,
negative-sense RNA. New viral particles are
created by budding from the surface of their
hosts’ cells; however, filovirus replication
strategies are not completely understood
When were the members of the filovirus family
first recognized?
The first filovirus was recognized in 1967 when a number of
laboratory workers in Germany and Yugoslavia,
who were handling tissues from green monkeys,
developed hemorrhagic fever. A total of 31 cases
and seven deaths were associated with these
outbreaks. The virus was named after Marburg,
Germany, the site of one of the outbreaks.
After the initial outbreaks, the virus disappeared. It did
not reemerge until 1975, when a traveler, most
likely exposed in Zimbabwe, became ill in
Johannesburg, South Africa. The virus was
transmitted there to his traveling companion and
a nurse. A few sporadic cases of Marburg
hemorrhagic fever have been identified since
that time.
Ebola virus was first identified in 1976 when two outbreaks
of Ebola hemorrhagic fever (Ebola HF) occurred
in northern Zaire (now the Democratic Republic
of Congo) and southern Sudan. The outbreaks
involved what eventually proved to be two
different species of Ebola virus; both were
named after the nations in which they were
discovered. Both viruses showed themselves to be
highly lethal, as 90% of the Zairian cases and
50% of the Sudanese cases resulted in death.
Since 1976, Ebola virus appeared sporadically in
Africa, with small to midsize outbreaks
confirmed between 1976 and 1979. Large epidemics
of Ebola HF occurred in Kikwit, Zaire in 1995
and in Gulu, Uganda in 2000. Smaller outbreaks
were identified in Gabon between 1994 and 1996.
For information on known Ebola HF cases and
outbreaks, please refer to the
chronological
list .
What are the natural hosts of filoviruses?
It appears that filoviruses are zoonotic, that is,
transmitted to humans from ongoing life cycles
in animals other than humans. Despite numerous
attempts to locate the natural reservoir or
reservoirs of Ebola and Marburg viruses, their
origins remain undetermined. However, because
the virus can be replicated in some species of
bats, some types of bats native to the areas
where the virus is found may prove to be the
viruses’ carriers.
How are filoviruses spread?
In an outbreak or isolated case among humans, just how
the virus is transmitted from the natural
reservoir to a human is unknown. Once a human is
infected, however, person-to-person transmission
is the means by which further infections occur.
Specifically, transmission involves close
personal contact between an infected individual
or their body fluids, and another person. During
recorded outbreaks of hemorrhagic fever caused
by filovirus infection, persons who cared for
(fed, washed, medicated) or worked very closely
with infected individuals were especially at
risk of becoming infected themselves. Nosocomial
(hospital) transmission through contact with
infected body fluids – via reuse of unsterilized
syringes, needles, or other medical equipment
contaminated with these fluids – has also been
an important factor in the spread of disease.
When close contact between uninfected and
infected persons is minimized, the number of new
filovirus infections in humans usually declines.
Although in the laboratory the viruses display
some capability of infection through
small-particle aerosols, airborne spread among
humans has not been clearly demonstrated.
During outbreaks, isolation of patients and use of
protective clothing and disinfection procedures
(together called viral hemorrhagic fever
isolation precautions or barrier nursing) has
been sufficient to interrupt further
transmission of Marburg or Ebola viruses, and
thus to control and end the outbreak. Because
there is no known effective treatment for the
hemorrhagic fevers caused by filoviruses,
transmission prevention through application of
VHF isolation precautions is currently the
centerpiece of filovirus control.
In conjunction with the World Health Organization, CDC
has developed practical, hospital-based
guidelines, titled
Infection Control
for Viral Haemorrhagic Fevers In the African
Health Care Setting. The manual can
help health-care facilities recognize cases and
prevent further hospital-based disease
transmission using locally available materials
and few financial resources.