Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF) is a widespread tick-borne viral disease, a zoonosis of domestic animals and wild animals, that may affect humans. The pathogenic virus, especially common in East and West Africa, is a member of the Bunyaviridae family of RNA viruses. Clinical disease is rare in infected mammals, but commonly severe in infected humans, with a 30% mortality rate. Outbreaks of illness are usually attributable to handling infected animals or people.
The causitive organism is found in Asia, Eastern Europe, the Middle East, a belt across central Africa and South Africa and Madagascar (see map *) The main environmental reservoir for the virus is small mammals (particularly European hare, Middle-African hedgehogs and multimammate rats). Ticks carry the virus to domestic animal stock. Sheep, goats and cattle develop high titers of virus in blood, but tend not to fall ill. Birds are generally resistant with the exception of ostriches.
Patients usually begin to recover after 9–10 days from symptom onset, but 30% die in the second week of illness.
When feverish patients with evidence of bleeding require resuscitation or intensive care, body substance isolation procedures should be followed *.
The United States armed forces maintain special stocks of ribavirin to protect personnel deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq from CCHF.
On July 28, 2005 authorities reported 41 cases of CCHF in Turkey's Yozgat Province, with one death.
Krim-Kongo-Fieber | クリミア・コンゴ出血熱 | Kırım-Kongo Kanamalı Ateşi
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"Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever".
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