Revista de la Facultad de Medicina (Jul 2016)

Warning: Ebola arrived in Columbus land

  • Felipe Coiffman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15446/revfacmed.v64n3.58673
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 64, no. 3
pp. 401 – 403

Abstract

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A few years ago, only some students of geography knew that Ebola was the name of a small river in the Democratic Republic of Congo. In 1976, in the village of Yambuku, a man died of a rare hemorrhagic fever which alerted the scientific world. Rumor has it that this man bought a fruit bat and later cooked and ate it, along with his family; some days later, all of them died. The cause of these deaths was a virus that was later called the Ebola virus (1). After this event, the epidemic spread throughout the town and then to other places. Today, about 4 000 people worldwide have been killed by the virus, including one case in the United States, two in Spain and one in Brazil. Only 1 in 10 infected patients survive and poor calculations estimate 20 000 people infected, especially in the West African republics.

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