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Liberia shuts border with Ebola ravaged Guinea

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Liberia shuts border with Ebola ravaged Guinea
As a precaution against the spread of Ebola following the death of four people, Liberia closed its border with Guinea on Tuesday.
 
Guinea Information Minister Lenn Eugene Nangbe told Reuters about the number of lives claimed following fresh outbreak of the dreaded virus which has reared its ugly head again in the West African sub region.
 
In 1976, Ebola (named after the Ebola River in Zaire) first emerged in Sudan and Zaire. The first outbreak of Ebola (Ebola-Sudan) infected over 284 people, with a mortality rate of 53%. A few months later, the second Ebola virus emerged from Yambuku, Zaire, Ebola-Zaire (EBOZ).
 
Read also: Outcry as Sirleaf appoints son Liberia central bank governor
 
EBOZ, with the highest mortality rate of any of the Ebola viruses (88%), infected 318 people. Despite the tremendous effort of experienced and dedicated researchers, Ebola’s natural reservoir was never identified.
 
The third strain of Ebola, Ebola Reston (EBOR), was first identified in 1989 when infected monkeys were imported into Reston, Virginia, from Mindanao in the Philippines.
 
Fortunately, the few people who were infected with EBOR (seroconverted) never developed Ebola hemorrhagic fever (EHF).
 
The last known strain of Ebola, Ebola Cote d’Ivoire (EBO-CI) was discovered in 1994 when a female ethologist performing a necropsy on a dead chimpanzee from the Tai Forest, Cote d’Ivoire, accidentally infected herself during the necropsy.

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