Journal article
Pathogenesis of filoviral haemorrhagic fevers
S Mahanty, M Bray
Lancet Infectious Diseases | ELSEVIER SCI LTD | Published : 2004
Abstract
The filoviruses, marburgvirus and ebolavirus, cause epidemics of haemorrhagic fever with high case-fatality rates. The severe illness results from a complex of pathogenetic mechanisms that enable the virus to suppress innate and adaptive immune responses, infect and kill a broad variety of cell types, and elicit strong inflammatory responses and disseminated intravascular coagulation, producing a syndrome resembling septic shock. Most experimental data have been obtained on Zaire ebolavirus, which causes uniformly lethal disease in experimentally infected non-human primates but produces a broader range of outcomes in naturally infected human beings. 10-30% of patients can survive the illness..
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Awarded by National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases