Ebola May Persist in Survivors' Eyeballs for Months.
WASHINGTON:-
It
seems like the plot of the British Zombie Apocalypse movie “28 weeks later”.
The Ebola virus can persist within the
eyeballs for months after a patient recovers from the deadly disease,
researchers have found. A report released this week by the US journal New
England Journal of Medicine described a case in which Ebola was present in the
eye's aqueous humor 10 weeks after the virus was cleared from the patient's
blood, Xinhua reported
Aqueous
humor is the clear fluid in the front of the eye, between the lens and the
cornea. Despite the presence of Ebola in the eye, the researchers were quick to
note that samples from the patient's tears and conjunctiva, the surface of the
eye and eyelids, tested negative for the virus. It, therefore, indicated
that casual contact with Ebola survivors carried no risk.
The
patient, identified by US media as 43-year-old Ian Crozier, was diagnosed with
Ebola in September, while working in an Ebola treatment unit in Sierra Leone as
a doctor for the World Health Organization (WHO).
He was
then transported to the US and treated at Emory University Hospital's serious
communicable disease unit for 40 days, including 12 days of mechanical
ventilation and 24 days of renal replacement therapy. After his blood and
urine tested negative for the virus, Crozier was discharged home.
A semen
sample obtained on the day of discharge, however, tested positive, so he was
advised to abstain from sex or to use condoms for at least three months,
according to the report. Shortly after discharge, Crozier found he had new
symptoms, including low back pain.
Two
months later, he returned to the same hospital with an inflammation called
uveitis and increased pressure in his left eye. The resulting swelling led to
reduced vision, and, surprisingly, eye colour changed from blue to green. The
doctors obtained an aqueous humor sample, which tested positive for the Ebola
virus.
"It
felt almost personal that the virus could be in my eye without me knowing
it," Crozier told the New York Times. Several studies of prior outbreaks
have shown that Ebola infections often manifest in the eyes, and can impact
vision and cause blindness long after a systemic infection has cleared.
Lead
author Steven Yeh, an ophthalmologist at the Emory Eye Center, believed that
surveillance for the development of eye disease in the post-Ebola period is
needed.
"The
presence of viable Ebola virus in the eye could mean that other Ebola survivors
may also be at risk for the development of uveitis," he said in a
statement. Uveitis is inflammation of the uvea, the middle layer of the eye
between the retina and the sclera (white of the eye). It can lead to vision
loss.
The
findings also pointed to a need for infection control precautions when Ebola
survivors underwent invasive procedures involving the eyes, the researchers
said. As for Crozier, he experienced visual recovery following therapy for
uveitis. His eye colour also returned to normal, but why it changed colour is
still a mystery.
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