Dr. Moses Massaquoi |
Liberia confirmed a third Ebola case on Thursday, nearly two
months after it was declared Ebola free, and officials said they were
investigating whether the disease had managed to lurk in animals before
resurfacing.
Dr Moses Massaquoi, case
management team leader for Liberia’s Ebola task force, said the three villagers
who had tested positive for the disease had shared a meal of dog meat, which is
commonly eaten in Liberia.
“They come from the same
time and have a history of having had dog meat together,” he said.
NewsDaily.com report continues:
The response team was
investigating whether domestic animals might be carrying the virus, he said,
referring also to mysterious deaths of hundreds of cattle in remote Lofa County.
Liberia, the country
worst hit by the West African Ebola outbreak discovered last year, was also its
biggest success story: the only one of the three hard-hit countries so far to
be declared Ebola free.
The outbreak was declared
over in Liberia on May 9 even as cases have continued to emerge in neighboring
Sierra Leone and Guinea. Liberia accounts for more than 4,800 of the 11,220
deaths in the West African outbreak.
The first new Liberian
case, 17-year-old Abraham Memaigar, died on Sunday in the village of Nedowein
in Margibi County, about 50 km (30 miles) from the capital Monrovia. Two others
have since tested positive in the village.
“We have, as of
yesterday, three confirmed cases,” Deputy Health Minister Tolbert Nyenswah said
on Thursday. “One expired, who was the 17-year-old boy … The two live cases are
24 years old and 27 years old. They are stable.”
None of the new victims
are known to have traveled to Guinea or Sierra Leone, and Nedowein is far from
the borders, leading to speculation that there could be hidden pockets of the
virus or new means of transmission.
President Ellen Johnson
Sirleaf voiced confidence that Liberia’s Ebola taskforce would quickly bring
the situation under control.
“There is no need to
panic,” she told Reuters on the sidelines of an official ceremony. “Our health
team is on top of it. It will be contained.”
Residents in Nedowein
were baffled by the resurgence of the disease.
“An Ebola case being
reported in the middle part of Liberia is confusing,” said Adolphus Gbinee,
Memaigar’s uncle. “We do not have cases at our borders, not even in Monrovia.
How could Ebola jump over those places and come here in Nedowein?”
Fears Of Animal Transmission
A U.S. military operation
that helped Liberia’s government counter the outbreak has mostly withdrawn. But
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), a U.S. health body, said
it was working with authorities to study the origin of the cases and stop the
virus spreading.
Some locals said Memaigar
and others in the village had recently dug up and eaten a dead dog.
In past outbreaks, humans
have been infected by eating monkey flesh, and a number of West African nations
have banned the consumption of bush meat as a precaution.
Another possibility is
that the virus survived among humans in remote areas. Ebola’s symptoms are
often muddled with other tropical diseases. A local clinic misdiagnosed
Memaigar with malaria and gave him antibiotics and rehydration salts.
“There may still be
clusters of EVD (Ebola) within Liberia that have been smoldering on without the
knowledge of any authorities,” Ian Mackay, a virologist at Australia’s
University of Queensland, wrote in his blog.
Ben Neuman, a virologist
and Ebola expert at Reading University, said Ebola survivors, who can carry a
small bit of the live virus in their bodies for months after recovering, might
be responsible for the new cases.
“The new outbreak in
Liberia is probably a rare reactivation that we are only seeing because there
are so many Ebola survivors living in one place,” he told Reuters.
Sexual transmission is
another possible explanation. The virus can persist in semen for up to 90 days,
versus 21 days in other fluids like blood or vomit.
Nyenswah said health
officials were monitoring 175 people believed to have come into contact with
the three cases, though none had yet exhibited symptoms of the disease, which
had been localized in the village of Nedowein.
“There is no further
spread of the virus to any part of the country as we speak,” he said.
Meanwhile CCTV Africa reports Liberia
officials said they were investigating whether the
disease had managed to lurk in animals before resurfacing. Dr Moses
Massaquoi, case management team leader for Liberia’s Ebola task force, said the
three villagers who had tested positive for the disease had shared a meal of
dog meat, which is commonly eaten in Liberia.
“They come from the same
time and have a history of having had dog meat together,” he said.
The response team was
investigating whether domestic animals might be carrying the virus, he said,
referring also to mysterious deaths of hundreds of cattle in remote Lofa County.
Liberia, the country
worst hit by the West African Ebola outbreak last year, was also its biggest
success story: the only one of the three hard-hit countries so far to be declared
Ebola free.
The
outbreak was declared over in Liberia on May 9, even as cases have continued to
emerge in neighbouring Sierra Leone and Guinea. Liberia accounts for more than 4,800 of
the 11,220
deaths in the West
African outbreak.
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