World Health Organization officials said the outbreak appeared to originate from a village where three children died after reportedly eating a bat carcass.
Crimean–Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF) caused by the CCHF virus, a member of the family Bunyaviridae, genus Nairovirus, is a tick-borne acute viral hemorrhagic fever with a high case–fatality ...
The outbreak began in January, with 419 cases recorded so far, and comes after another mystery illness killed 143 in December ...
Health officials do not know the cause of the outbreaks, or whether the cases in the two remote villages are related ...
The World Health Organization is investigating "another cluster of illness" in northern Congo, as a deadly mystery disease spreads in the region.
As of February 16, there were 431 cases and 53 deaths in two outbreaks in remote villages in different health zones in ...
samples from 13 cases were sent to the National Institute for Biomedical Research in Congo’s capital, Kinshasa, for testing, the WHO said. All samples were negative for common hemorrhagic fever ...
[66] Crimean–Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) internalization is clathrin and pH dependent. The CCHFV replication cycle is dependent on actin and microtubule structures. The G N protein of ...
Laboratory testing has proven that a recent deadly disease outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo was caused by malaria ...
Symptoms including fever and fatigue progressed to hemorrhagic signs such as nosebleeds ... An outbreak of unknown cause reported in Congo in December was ultimately identified as malaria.
Uganda’s Ministry of Health on Friday confirmed an outbreak of the Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF) in the western ...
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