The World Health
Organisation, WHO has urged all male survivors of Ebola to be tested three
months after the onset of symptoms and then monthly until they know they have
no risk of passing on the virus through their semen.
The
Head of the WHO’s Ebola Response, Bruce Aylward, said on Thursday in Geneva
that isolated flare-ups of Ebola may point to a higher risk of transmission via
the semen of male survivors than previously thought.
“It’s not the sex that is
dangerous; it’s the semen that is dangerous. How people actually get exposed,
in soiled linens or whatever, is not clear.
“Transmission through semen may explain why a few cases continue
to occur even though the outbreak has been almost completely eradicated by an
intense international effort, recently bolstered by the deployment of a trial
vaccine in Guinea and Sierra Leone,’’ he said.
Aylward
said the latest re-occurrence, in a village on the northern border of Sierra
Leone, followed the death of a 67-year-old woman late last month, 50 days after
the previous confirmed case in the region.
He
said transmission chains are considered to have been broken after 42 days with
no new infections.
However,
Aylward said that sexual transmission was “obviously
not a huge risk, because if it were we would have seen a lot more in the areas
that were hardest hit at the beginning of this outbreak.”
He
said this could undermine the hope of ending the outbreak in West Africa by
2015.
A
clinician said on condition of anonymity, that a forthcoming study in the New
England Journal of Medicine, based on around 200 survivors, found that around
half still had traces of the virus in their semen after six months.
“The old advice of three months
is no longer good.
“The number of people with persistent virus in their semen is much
greater than expected,”clinician said.
The
clinician added that the risk might not only be from sex but also from
masturbation. (Reuters/NAN)

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