Ebola
survivors suffer severe mental and neurological problems
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[July 12, 2018] By
Kate Kelland
(Reuters) - People who survive the deadly
Ebola virus can continue to suffer severe psychiatric and neurological
problems including depression, debilitating migraines, nerve pain and
stroke, according to a study published on Wednesday.
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Researchers who analyzed patients infected during the 2014-2016
Ebola outbreak in West Africa found that some survivors had such
severe health conditions that they were left unable to care for
themselves.
"We knew that a disease as severe as Ebola would leave survivors
with major problems - however, it took me aback to see young and
previously active people who had survived but were now unable to
move half their bodies, or talk, or pick up their children," said
Janet Scott of Britain's University of Liverpool, who co-led the
research.
She said the findings show a need for larger and more detailed
studies of Ebola survivors compared to matched controls who did not
get virus.
Published in the Emerging Infectious Diseases journal, the study
looked at patient notes from of more than 300 Ebola survivors in
Sierra Leone, one of the countries worst hit in the 2014-2016
epidemic.
Thirty-four selected patients were then asked to attend a joint
neuro-psychiatric clinic in 2016 where they underwent a full
neurological examination, psychiatric screening and specialist
investigations including brain scan imaging.
Patrick Howlett of King's College London, who co-led the research,
said its results showed that Ebola survivors can suffer with
"post-Ebola syndrome" or PES - a wide range of disorders "from minor
to extremely severe and disabling".
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Neurological problems included stroke, debilitating migraine-type
headaches and nerve pain, while the most frequent psychiatric
diagnoses among the survivors studied were depression and anxiety.
The 2014-2016 West Africa Ebola epidemic killed more than 11,300
people and infected around 28,000 as it swept through Guinea, Sierra
Leone and Liberia. World Health Organization (WHO) estimates suggest
there are well over 10,000 people who survived the disease.
The researchers said the findings pointed to an urgent need for
specialist medical professionals trained in the needs of Ebola
survivors and how best to treat PES.
"Post-Ebola syndrome is not going away, and those with the condition
deserve better treatment," said Scott.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)
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