An interesting 2012 study
by scientists at the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) entitled "Transmission of Ebola Virus from pigs to non-human
primates" takes an interesting look at how the Zaire variant of
the Ebola virus can be transmitted between pigs and from pigs to macaques
without direct contact.
One of the Ebola viruses
that has already made it to North America, the Reston variant/subspecies, does
not seem to be a cause of the disease in humans and was the cause of the
outbreak of Ebola in Reston, Virginia in 1989 and discussed in this posting. The Reston subspecies
appears to have resulted from a mutation of the Ebola virus and this particular
virus causes hemorrhagic fever in monkeys and can be transmitted to humans who
remain asymptomatic. The same cannot be said for the Zaire subspecies (aka Ebola) which is quite lethal as you can see on this chart from the Centers for Disease
Control:
Coincidentally, it also happens that the current Ebola outbreak has been caused by the Zaire subspecies.
In the study by CFIA
researchers, scientists inoculated six week old piglets with the Zaire Ebola Kikwit 95 (ZEBOV) oro-nasally. The piglets were then transferred
to pig pens in the same room where four cynomolgus macaques were housed in two
levels of individual cages, separated from the piglets by a wire barrier 20
centimetres (8 inches) in front of the bottom level of cages to prevent direct
contact between the two species.
All of the piglets
developed symptoms of Ebola between five and seven days following the inoculation and recovered within nine days after infection. Autopsies showed that all piglets had developed
antigens showing the presence of the virus in their systems.
All four of the macaques
were healthy until seven days after exposure, however at eight days after exposure, two
of the macaques developed petechial hemorrhages on their skin and along internal surfaces
of their arms and legs and were euthanized. The other two macaques
remained healthy until twelve days after exposure when they showed clinical signs
of Ebola infection. When they were euthanized, examination of their internal
organs showed that there was damage to the lungs and liver. Both lungs
show a pattern of lesions that suggested infection of the lungs due to the
spread of the virus. It is also important to note that it appears that the piglets were able to remain symptom-free at the same time as they transmitted the disease to the macaques.
The study concludes:
"The present study provides evidence that
infected pigs can efficiently transmit ZEBOV to NHPs in conditions resembling
farm setting. Our findings support the hypothesis that airborne transmission
may contribute to ZEBOV spread, specifically from pigs to primates, and may
need to be considered in assessing transmission from animals to humans in
general. The present experimental findings would explain REBOV (Reston
Ebola Virus) seropositivity of pig
farmers in Philippines that were not involved in slaughtering or had no known contact
with contaminated pig tissues. The results of this study also raise a
possibility that wild or domestic pigs may be a natural (non-reservoir) host
for EBOV participating in the EBOV transmission to other species in sub-Saharan
Africa." (my bold)
You'll note that the
study concluded that airborne transmission may contribute to the spread of
ZEBOV (Zaire Ebola virus). Why is it then that the CDC says this:
“When an infection does occur in humans, the virus can be
spread in several ways to others. Ebola is spread through direct contact
(through broken skin or mucous membranes) with
•
blood or body fluids
(including but not limited to urine, saliva, feces, vomit, and semen) of a
person who is sick with Ebola
•
objects (like needles and
syringes) that have been contaminated with the virus
•
infected animals
•
Ebola is not spread through the air or by water, or in general, food. However, in Africa, Ebola
may be spread as a result of handling bushmeat (wild animals hunted for food)
and contact with infected bats.” (my bold)
For my Canadian readers, this is what the Public Health Agency of
Canada has to say about the spread of Ebola:
The Ebola virus can spread through:
▪
contact with infected
animals
▪
contact with blood, body
fluids or tissues of infected persons
▪
contact with medical
equipment, such as needles, contaminated with infected body fluids
Exposure can occur in health care settings when staff do not
wear appropriate protective equipment, such as masks, gowns and gloves.
As long as precautions are taken, there is low risk of
contracting EVD in a country where the disease is present.”
It certainly would appear
that at least some governments are ignoring science in their efforts to calm
the masses, doesn’t it? While we should be cautious when extrapolating these results to human-to-human transmission of Ebola and while I don't want to appear to be one of the tin foil hat crowd, as a scientist, the CFIA study certainly should give us reason to be cautious about what we are being told. Considering that I found this study quite easily on the internet, I wonder why governments are choosing to ignore its conclusions?
Thanks for another great article.
ReplyDeleteIf some statements are repeated over and over again, they become fact. We really don't need science.
Don't panic, there is no way this can spread in North America. It only speads through "direct contact" (what does that mean anyway?)
Besides, the current narative is a convenient way to blame the victims, either explicitly or implicitly (they wern't careful enough, or they should have known better, those primitive burial rites, etc) and to avoid the fact there is not much anybody can do if some of this research about spreading without contact applies to the current outbreak.
Well, even if Ebola were not airborne, masks would still be a good idea because you'd hate for blood or vomit particles to accidentally make it into your mouth or nose.
ReplyDeleteAmericans ignored Ebola while thousands of people died in Africa, now that one person gets sick in America it has become an "Oh My God" moment. This virus has worked overtime to pick up "critical mass." I'm referring to the point where enough people are infected with the virus that it can sustain a chain reaction and expand out of control.
ReplyDeleteThe bad news is Ebola may have already reached critical mass and may now be impossible to contain. The economic and humanitarian implications of this are massive and it could change everything. More on why we should be very concerned in the article below.
http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2014/09/ebola-may-have-reached-critical-mass.html
Thank you for posting this. I was reading through you other articles and was almost beginning to trust you. Now I don't have to. Which saves me a lot of time.
ReplyDelete1) Obviously we don't know enough about Ebola. Until this outbreak there just weren't enough cases to have relaible data. Perhaps it was a bad idea to cut the cdc's budget during the sequester?
2) As with all science: A single study is not enough to draw a real conclusion. Ever. Find 10-15 more of these and then find consensus. There will be many papers that disagree. Once we have 1,000 or 10,000 studies we will start to know something. That's what it is to not ignore science.
3) there is a very specific definition for "Airborne disease". The Flu is one. Ebola is not. Here is how ebola can end up in your lung tissue and also a nice explanation of the difference between airborne and not-airborne: http://virologydownunder.blogspot.com/2014/08/ebola-virus-may-be-spread-by-droplets.html
4) Ebola is horrific. However, unlike many other diseases it is still containable. The way to contain it is to NOT panic but treat it with the respect it deserves. Which is an overwhelming, yet calm, response.
Your article does not help and represents a very under-researched understanding.