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New research suggests that the massive and destructive inflammation that characterizes Ebola virus disease may be caused by the release of foreign proteins from infected cells.
Ebola's physical legacy doesn't end when a patient leaves the hospital. A follow-up of the small group of patients treated in the U.S. finds many experienced various symptoms for months.
W A S H I N G T O N, July 31 -- A protein that disrupts blood vesselwalls explains why victims of the Ebola virus suffer fromghastly and often deadly bleeding, and could offer a target fora ...
People who survive Ebola may still battle debilitating health problems a year after being declared infection-free, according to an ongoing trial in Guinea which highlighted the need for patient ...
People who survive Ebola may suffer "severe" neurological and psychiatric problems long after they recover from the virus, according to a new study published Wednesday.. Some cases of so-called ...
Post-Ebola syndrome continues to affect some of the approximately 17,000 people who survived the virus as many have eye, musculoskeletal or neurological symptoms, researchers have found in recent ...
More than four years after the Ebola epidemic in West Africa, scientists are still uncovering sobering new information about the lasting effects of the virus on survivors. A study published Monday ...
Here's How Ebola Affects The Body. By Lauren F Friedman. 2014-07-28T18:02:00Z Share. Facebook Email X LinkedIn Copy link. An icon in the shape of a lightning bolt. ...
The first scientifically well-covered case of Ebola's effect on the eye occurred after an American physician named Ian Crozier contracted the virus in West Africa in the fall of 2014, before being ...
The Ebola virus causes viral hemorrhagic fever, which according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), refers to a group of viruses that affect multiple organ systems in the ...
The neurological effects of Ebola virus disease persist for years after the initial infection, according to findings presented at the American Neurological Association's 143rd Annual Meeting Oct ...
The Ebola scare that has prompted calls for a travel ban and a quarantine of visitors from West Africa has done little to dampen business travel from the U.S.
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