viernes, 22 de septiembre de 2017

Etymologia: Marburg Virus - Volume 23, Number 10—October 2017 - Emerging Infectious Disease journal - CDC

Etymologia: Marburg Virus - Volume 23, Number 10—October 2017 - Emerging Infectious Disease journal - CDC





Volume 23, Number 10—October 2017

Etymologia

Etymologia: Marburg Virus

Ronnie HenryComments to Author  and Frederick A. Murphy

Marburg [mahrʹboork] Virus

In August and September 1967, an outbreak of a viral hemorrhagic fever occurred among laboratory workers in Marburg and Frankfurt, Germany, and Belgrade, Yugoslavia (now Serbia) who were processing kidneys from African green monkeys that had been imported from Uganda. (These kidneys were used in the production of polio vaccine.) Of 25 primary and 6 secondary cases, 7 were fatal.
Thumbnail of Negative contrast electron microscopy of Marburg virus, from original monkey kidney cell culture propagation done at CDC in 1967, magnification ≈40,000x. Image courtesy of Frederick A. Murphy.
Figure. Negative contrast electron microscopy of Marburg virus, from original monkey kidney cell culture propagation done at CDC in 1967, magnification ≈40,000x. Image courtesy of Frederick A. Murphy.
A new virus, named Marburg virus, was isolated from patients and monkeys, and the high case-fatality ratio called for the best biocontainment of the day (Figure). The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) borrowed a mobile containment laboratory from the National Institutes of Health and set it up in the CDC parking lot; it provided approximately biosafety level 2+ containment. A few isolated, sporadic cases were reported in the following decades until a 1998 outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo affected 154 people with a case-fatality ratio of 83%, and a 2004 outbreak in Angola affected 227 people with a case-fatality ratio of 90%.

References

  1. Siegert RShu HLSlenczka WPeters DMüller G[On the etiology of an unknown human infection originating from monkeys] [in German]Dtsch Med Wochenschr1967;92:23413DOIPubMed
  2. Kissling RERobinson RQMurphy FAWhitfield SGAgent of disease contracted from green monkeys. Science1968;160:88890DOIPubMed
  3. Kissling REMurphy FAHenderson BEMarburg virus. Ann N Y Acad Sci1970;174(2 Unusual Isola):93245DOIPubMed
  4. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. About Marburg hemorrhagic fever [cited 2017 Mar 31]. https://www.cdc.gov/vhf/marburg/about.html

Figure

Cite This Article

DOI: 10.3201/eid2310.ET2310

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