Quantcast

Researcher Dies After Accidental Ebola Jab

llkoolkeg

Ranger LL
Sep 5, 2001
4,335
15
in da shed, mon, in da shed
MOSCOW (Reuters) - A researcher in a heavily guarded Siberian virology laboratory died after pricking herself with a syringe containing the deadly Ebola virus, a spokeswoman from the lab said Tuesday.

"It was an accident or an unlucky coincidence. Her hand just slipped and she jabbed herself," the spokeswoman said.

Ebola begins with a high fever and can lead to massive internal bleeding. It kills between 50 and 90 percent of victims, depending on the strain of the virus, for which there is no known cure. It is one of the world's most feared diseases.

Most outbreaks have occurred in Africa, far from the Siberian lab where the senior technician was experimenting on guinea pigs when the accident happened on May 5. She died two weeks later.

Set deep in Siberia, a four-hour flight from Moscow, the state-owned Vector research center at Novosibirsk does research into deadly diseases such as SARS and anthrax.

Along with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control, it is one of only two places on earth with official stockpiles of smallpox, which killed around 300 million people last century.

After the accident, the woman was hospitalized in a ward specially equipped to contain virulent diseases. Anyone who came into contact with her was put under observation for three weeks.

Her name was not released at her family's request.

A spokeswoman for Russia's Health Ministry said the government was satisfied enough had been done to prevent an outbreak. :dead:

05/26/04 11:22

© Copyright Reuters Ltd. All rights reserved. The information contained In this news report may not be published, broadcast or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of Reuters Ltd.
 

llkoolkeg

Ranger LL
Sep 5, 2001
4,335
15
in da shed, mon, in da shed
That's a nasty, NASTY bug. If you ever want an interesting related read, try "The Hot Zone" by Richard Preston. It's based on a true story. Oddly enough, my wife used to babysit for the real life protagonist's family when she was a youth and lot of the action takes place at USAMRIID located at Ft. Detrick here in Frederick, MD. My wife and I lived less than a mile from Detrick for four years and on early mornings when the wind was just right, you could smell whatever it was they were incinerating there. We used to joke that it smelled as if the monkey bisque was overcooked. :devil:


The Hot Zone
Richard Preston
3OOpp New York: Random House

In October of l989, macaque monkeys, housed at the Reston Primate Quarantine Unit in Reston Virginia, began dying from a mysterious disease at an alarming rate. The monkeys,imported from the Phillipines, were to be sold as labratory animals. Twenty-nine of a shipment of one hundred died within a month. Dan Dalgard, the veterinarian who cared for the monkeys, feared they were dying from Simian Hemorrhagic Fever, a disease lethal to monkeys but harmless to humans. Dr. Dalgard decided to enlist the aid ot the United States Army Medical Research Institue of Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID) to help diagnose the case.

On November 28th Dr. Peter Jahlring of the Institute was in his lab testing the virus culture from the monkeys. Much to his horror the blood tested positive for the deadly Ebola Zaïre virus. Ebola Zaïre is so lethal that nine out of ten of its victims die. It is a level-four hot virus. That means there are no vaccines and no cures. In 1976 Ebola climbed out of its primordal hiding place in the jungles of Africa, and in two outbreaks in Zaire and Sudan wiped out six hundred people. But the virus had never been seen outside of Africa and the consequences of having the virus in a busy suburb of Washington D.C. were too terrifying to contemplate. Theoretically, an airborne strain of Ebola could emerge and circle the world in about sixs weeks. Victims usually "crash and bleed," a military term which literally means "the virus attacks every organ of the body and transforms every part of the body into a digesed slime of virus particles. Ebola does in ten days what it takes HIV ten years to accomplish."

Upon reading The Hot Zone one could readily believe that this compelling yet terrifying story sprung from the imaginations of Stephen King or Michael Crichton. But the frightening truth is that the events actually occured and that near catastrophe was avoided by the combined heroic efforts of various men and women from USAMRIID and the Center for Disease Control. Preston writes compassionately and humanistically of the doctors, virologists and epidemiogists who are the real-life Indiana Jones's of the virus trail. Some like Drs. Joe McCormick and Karl Johnson and C.J. Peters spent years tracking down deadly virus's in the jungles of South America and Africa, some narrowly escaping death. Their work is filled with courage, brilliance and sometimes petty rivalries. Others, like Dr. Nancy Jaax have lived rather conventional lives, aside from the fact that they don a chem suit and work with highly lethal virus' on a regular basis.

Preston has written a fast-paced and fascinating novel of scientific sleuthdom. His gripping narrative is filled with horrifying and gore-filied descriptions and tension-building plot turns. From depictions of events at a Belgian hospital in Africa to the harrowing labratory scenes in Virginia he is adept at keeping the reader riveted. At the conclusion the reader is left with the chilling and fact based haunting after thought "What if?"
 

TN

Hey baby, want a hot dog?
Jul 9, 2002
14,301
1,353
Jimtown, CO
Originally posted by llkoolkeg

© Copyright Reuters Ltd. All rights reserved. The information contained In this news report may not be published, broadcast or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of Reuters Ltd.
uh-oh....did get prior written consent?

mmmmmmm.........monkey bisque.........:drool:
 

binary visions

The voice of reason
Jun 13, 2002
22,110
1,166
NC
Originally posted by llkoolkeg
That's a nasty, NASTY bug. If you ever want an interesting related read, try "The Hot Zone" by Richard Preston.
The Hot Zone was good. Another good read if you like virus stories is "The Cobra Event". Based on an intentional virus release (vs. the accidental one of The Hot Zone), but still excellent.
 

llkoolkeg

Ranger LL
Sep 5, 2001
4,335
15
in da shed, mon, in da shed
Originally posted by TN
uh-oh....did get prior written consent?

mmmmmmm.........monkey bisque.........:drool:
Nope...I like living on the edge! :)

Reading about how they have to puree monkey kidneys into smoothies to create the ideal host environment definitely put a hurting on my nomal summer intake of blender drinks. :monkey:
 

llkoolkeg

Ranger LL
Sep 5, 2001
4,335
15
in da shed, mon, in da shed
Originally posted by BurlySurly
MOSCOW (Reuters) - pricking herself :think: ....................................................:p
All the cool girls are doing it. MVC or Adam&Eve would be happy to supply the requisite power tools. I understand that washing machines with an unbalanced load on spin cycle make a wonderful vehicle for the ladies who happen to own faux dongs with suction cup bases. :devil: