This post has already been read 2381 times!
A case of Lassa fever, an acute viral haemorrhagic illness, has been recorded in the south of Guinea, the health authorities announced.
The virus was found in a 17-year-old girl from Kassadou, in the Gueckedou area where an epidemic has been declared, the health ministry said late Friday, calling her condition “satisfactory”.
A local laboratory identified the virus on April 20 and a second test in Conakry confirmed it, the ministry added.
Lassa fever belongs to the same family as the Ebola and Marburg viruses but is much less deadly.
It is endemic in a number of West African countries and spread by contact with rat faeces or urine or the bodily fluids of an infected person.
The virus takes its name from the town of Lassa in northern Nigeria, where it was first identified in 1969.