Key facts
*Lassa fever is an acute viral haemorrhagic illness of 1-4 weeks duration that occurs in West Africa.
*The Lassa virus is transmitted to humans via contact with food or household items contaminated with rodent urine or faeces.
*Person-to-person
infections and laboratory transmission can also occur, particularly in
hospitals lacking adequate infection prevent and Control measures.
*Lassa
fever is known to be endemic in Benin (where it was diagnosed for the
first time in November 2014), Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone and parts of
Nigeria, but probably exists in other West African countries as well.
*The
overall case-fatality rate is 1%. Observed case-fatality rate among
patients hospitalized with severe cases of Lassa fever is 15%.
*Early supportive care with rehydration and symptomatic treatment improves survival.
Background
Though
first described in the 1950s, the virus causing Lassa disease was not
identified until 1969. The virus is a single-stranded RNA virus
belonging to the virus family Arenaviridae .
About 80% of people
who become infected with Lassa virus have no symptoms. One in five
infections result in severe disease, where the virus affects several
organs such as the liver, spleen and kidneys.
Lassa fever is a zoonotic disease, meaning that
humans
become infected from contact with infected animals. The animal
reservoir, or host, of Lassa virus is a rodent of the genus Mastomys,
commonly known as the “multimammate rat.” Mastomys rats infected with
Lassa virus do not become ill, but they can shed the virus in their
urine and faeces.
Because the clinical course of the disease is
so variable, detection of the disease in affected patients has been
difficult. However, when presence of the disease is confirmed in a
community, prompt isolation of affected patients, good infection
protection and control practices
and rigorous contact tracing can stop outbreaks.
Symptoms of Lassa fever
The
incubation period of Lassa fever ranges from 6-21 days. The onset of
the disease, when it is symptomatic, is usually gradual, starting with
fever, general weakness, and malaise. After a few days, headache,sore
throat, muscle pain, chest pain, nausea, vomiting,diarrhoea, cough, and
abdominal pain may follow. In severe cases facial swelling, fluid in the
lung cavity, bleeding from the mouth, nose, vagina or gastrointestinal
tract and low blood pressure may develop. Protein may be noted in the
urine. Shock,seizures, tremor, disorientation, and coma may be seen in
the later stages. Deafness occurs in 25% of patients who survive the
disease. In half of these cases, hearing returns partially after 1-3
months. Transient hair loss and gait disturbance may occur during
recovery.
Death usually occurs within 14 days of onset in fatal ases. The disease is especially severe late in
pregnancy, with maternal death and/or fetal loss
occurring in greater than 80% of cases during the third trimester.
Transmission
Humans
usually become infected with Lassa virus from exposure to urine or
faeces of infected Mastomys rats.Lassa virus may also be spread between
humans through direct contact with the blood, urine, faeces, or other
bodily secretions of a person infected with Lassa fever. There is no
epidemiological evidence supporting airborne spread between humans.
Person-to-person
transmission occurs in both community and
health-care settings, where the virus may be spread by contaminated
medical equipment, such as re-used needles. Sexual transmission of Lassa
virus has been reported.
Lassa fever occurs in all age groups
and both sexes.Persons at greatest risk are those living in rural areas
where Mastomys are usually found, especially in communities with poor
sanitation or crowded living conditions. Health workers are at risk if
caring for Lassa fever patients in the absence of proper barrier nursing
and infection control practices.
Diagnosis
Because the
symptoms of Lassa fever are so varied and non-specific, clinical
diagnosis is often difficult,especially early in the course of the
disease. Lassa fever is difficult to distinguish from other viral
haemorrhagic fevers such as Ebola virus disease; and many other diseases
that cause fever, including malaria, shigellosis, typhoid fever and
yellow fever.
Definitive diagnosis requires testing that is
available only in specialized laboratories. Laboratory specimens may be
hazardous and must be handled with extreme care. Lassa virus infections
can only be diagnosed definitively in the laboratory using the following
tests:
*antibody enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
(ELISA)
*antigen detection tests
*reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction
(RT-PCR) assay
*virus isolation by cell culture.
Treatment and vaccines
The antiviral drug ribavirin seems to be an effective
treatment
for Lassa fever if given early on in the course of clinical illness.
There is no evidence to support the role of ribavirin as post-exposure
prophylactic treatment for Lassa fever.
There is currently no vaccine that protects against
Lassa fever.
Prevention and control
Prevention of Lassa fever relies on promoting good
“community hygiene” to discourage rodents from
entering homes. Effective measures include storing
grain
and other foodstuffs in rodent proof containers,disposing of garbage
far from the home, maintaining clean households and keeping cats.
Because Mastomys are so abundant in endemic areas, it is not possible to
completely eliminate them from the environment.
Family members should always be careful to avoid
contact with blood and body fluids while caring for sick persons.
In health-care settings, staff should always apply
standard
infection prevention and control precautions when caring for patients,
regardless of their presumed diagnosis. These include basic hand
hygiene,respiratory hygiene, use of personal protective equipment (to
block splashes or other contact with infected materials), safe injection
practices and safe burial practices.
Health workers caring for
patients with suspected or confirmed Lassa fever should apply extra
infection control measures to prevent contact with the patient’s blood
and body fluids and contaminated surfaces or materials such as clothing
and bedding. When in close contact (within 1 metre) of patients with
Lassa fever, health-care workers should wear face protection (a face
shield or a medical mask and goggles), a clean, non-sterile long-sleeved
gown, and gloves (sterile gloves for some procedures).
Laboratory workers are also at risk. Samples taken
from
humans and animals for investigation of Lassa virus infection should be
handled by trained staff and processed in suitably equipped
laboratories.
On rare occasions, travellers from areas where Lassa fever is endemic export the disease to other countries.
Although
malaria, typhoid fever, and many other tropical infections are much
more common, the diagnosis of Lassa fever should be considered in
febrile patients returning from West Africa, especially if they have had
exposures in rural areas or hospitals in countries where
Lassa fever is known to be endemic. Health-care
workers
seeing a patient suspected to have Lassa fever should immediately
contact local and national experts for advice and to arrange for
laboratory testing.
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