8/11/2019 MARBURG GREEN MONKEY FEVER VIRUS MUTATED IN 9 YEARS INTO EBOLA http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/marburg-green-monkey-fever-virus-mutated-in-9-years-into-ebola 1/31 THE MARBURG VIRUS THAT CAUSED GREEN MONKEY FEVER MUTATED INTO THE EBOLA VIRUS IN NINE YEARS: DOES THIS MEAN IT MIGHT MUTATE AGAIN? ALSO: WHY THOMAS ERIC DUNCAN DESERVED TO DIE AND “EBOLA MARY” WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF THEIR WAS A CARRIER WHO WAS CONTAGIOUS BUT SHOWED NO SYMPTOMS One strand of Ebola can vary between 800 - 1000 billionths of a meter in length with a uniform diameter of 80 billionths of a meter. One strand is all you need to infect you. Starts reproducing and becomes billions of viruses.
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MARBURG GREEN MONKEY FEVER VIRUS MUTATED IN 9 YEARS INTO EBOLA
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8/11/2019 MARBURG GREEN MONKEY FEVER VIRUS MUTATED IN 9 YEARS INTO EBOLA
ALSO: WHY THOMAS ERIC DUNCAN DESERVED TO DIE AND “EBOLA
MARY” WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF THEIR WAS A CARRIER WHO WAS
CONTAGIOUS BUT SHOWED NO SYMPTOMS
One strand of Ebola can vary between 800 - 1000 billionths of a meter inlength with a uniform diameter of 80 billionths of a meter. One strand is allyou need to infect you. Starts reproducing and becomes billions of viruses.
8/11/2019 MARBURG GREEN MONKEY FEVER VIRUS MUTATED IN 9 YEARS INTO EBOLA
Like the head of the Joint Chief of Staff I believe the likelihood ofmutation depends on the spread of the virus. If it become plentiful thechances are greater for the genetic code of the virus to change simply byvirtue of numbers. The number of Ebola cases in three West Africannations may jump to between 5,000 and 10,000 a week by Dec. 1 as thedeadly viral infection spreads, the World Health Organization said. Theoutbreak is still expanding geographically in Guinea, Sierra Leone andLiberia and accelerating in capital cities, Bruce Aylward, the WHO‟sassistant director-general in charge of the Ebola response, said in abriefing with reporters in Geneva. There have been about 1,000 new casesa week for the past three to four weeks, he said.
If a mutation occurs in one chance in a thousand you are going to
need a thousand viri. This is the nature of the mutation: The Ebola virus is
identical to Marburg virus in form and structure; however, it is antigenically
distinct from Marburg. Viruses are constantly changing. They can change in
two different ways. One way they change is called “antigenic drift.” These
are small changes in the genes of viruses that happen continually over time
as the virus replicates. These small genetic changes usually produce
viruses that are pretty closely related to one another, which can be
illustrated by their location close together on a phylogenetic tree. Viruses
that are closely related to each other usually share the same antigenic
properties and an immune system exposed to a similar virus will usuallyrecognize it and respond. (This is sometimes called cross-protection.)
But these small genetic changes can accumulate over time and result in
viruses that are antigenically different (further away on the phylogenetic
tree). When this happens, the body‟s immune system may not recognize
those viruses. This process works as follows: a person infected with a
particular virus develops antibody against that virus. As antigenic changes
accumulate, the antibodies created against the older viruses no longer
recognize the “newer” virus, and the person can get sick again. Genetic
changes that result in a virus with different antigenic properties is the main
reason why people can get the flu more than one time. This is also why the
flu vaccine composition must be reviewed each year, and updated as
needed to keep up with evolving viruses. Was this change a single-
The lowlife scum Thomas Eric Duncan knew he had been exposed to
Ebola. Read early news stories about Duncan. 60 MINUTES reported:
Eric Duncan was 42 years old, from Liberia, which is ground zero for this
outbreak. Half of all the cases in the world are in Liberia. He flew to Dallasto visit family, became sick a few days later, and then made his first visit to
the Dallas hospital.
It was the night of September 25 when Duncan first came into this
emergency room. According to the hospital records, he had a temperature
of 100.1. Over the course of the four hours or so that he was here, his
temperature spiked to 103, but then it dropped back down. Again,
according to the hospital records, he told the staff that he had come from
Africa, but did not specify West Africa or Liberia. About three o'clock in themorning, with his symptoms not very severe, the staff decided to send him
home with antibiotics.
Sidia Rose: I explained to him, "We are under the impression that you may
have been exposed to Ebola. And I said, "Where are you from?" And he
told me Liberia.
Sidia Rose: And I asked, "Have you been in contact with anyone who's
been sick?Scott Pelley: He said?
Sidia Rose: No. He said no.
State and federal health officials wanted to know if Duncan had been with
anyone who had died in Liberia.
Sidia Rose: And that's when he said to me his family had suffered a loss.
That he had buried his daughter who had died in childbirth.But Nurse Rose says Duncan told her it wasn't Ebola that killed his
daughter. Rose told us that she reported this to the Texas Department of
Health, but then Duncan denied his own story when he spoke to those
officials.
8/11/2019 MARBURG GREEN MONKEY FEVER VIRUS MUTATED IN 9 YEARS INTO EBOLA
Duncan was totally oblivious to the Ebola outbreak and thought MarthaleneWilliams might have gotten punched in the mouth and that was why shewas bleeding from the mouth.
Sonny Boy Williams 21, the sister of Marthalene Williams, 19, who gave thevirus to Duncan These ads are all over Liberia.
8/11/2019 MARBURG GREEN MONKEY FEVER VIRUS MUTATED IN 9 YEARS INTO EBOLA
The Wall Street Journal : The day that tests confirmed an Ebola diagnosis,Ms. Troh had an emotional conversation with Mr. Duncan, who was still
able to speak by phone. “He told her that if he had known he had Ebola, hewould have rather died in Liberia than come to the United States andexpose Louise and the family,” said Ms. Duo, her n iece.
What is he supposed to say. “Yeah I knew I could have contracted it and I
came to the USA anyway because I lack a degree of humanity and don‟t
give a shit about anyone but myself? I lied on the questionnaire and put allyour lives in danger. I am scum. I deserve Ebola!”
The latest Ebola case is being blamed on breech of protocols however the
victim, a health care worker who came into contact with Duncan has noidea how it happened.
Dr. Daniel Varga of Texas Health Resources said the worker was in full
protective gear when providing care to Duncan during his second visit to
Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital. Varga did not identify the worker and
said the family of the worker has “requested total privacy." Then there is the
case of the Spanish health worker contracting it where they had to kill her
pooch. The problem with the Protocols for Ebola is that they presuppose it
is not airborne, wherein there is a conflict in the Ebola scientific community
about if the virus is airborne or not. The monkey pig experiment wherein
the virus was spread through the air is said to have been flawed as it did
not take into account the monkey‟s flinging shit at each other or the ability
of the Ebola virus to live on glass cage surfaces. If it was airborne there
would be a lot more people dead. However the foremost authority on
8/11/2019 MARBURG GREEN MONKEY FEVER VIRUS MUTATED IN 9 YEARS INTO EBOLA
Ebola, Thomas Geisbert, who was an intern during the Reston incident,
equivocates:
GEISBERT: I mean, I think it's concerning. I think it's something that
you have to take seriously and look at. I don't want to, you know, instillpanic or fear. The virus is not transmitted like influenza. It's not airborne, at
least we don't have any evidence to this point that suggests that. It's mainly
transmitted by close contact - so contact with body fluids, things like that.
So I don't want to say that the risk is zero because there's always a risk,
and certainly, the people on that plane would need to be monitored and
followed. But I think, you know, historically, this has not really been a large
problem.
Dr. Philip K. Russell, a virologist who oversaw Ebola research whileheading the U.S. Army's Medical Research and Development Command,
and who later led the government's massive stockpiling of smallpox
vaccine after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, also said much was still to be
learned. "Being dogmatic is, I think, ill-advised, because there are too many
unknowns here."
Dr. C. J. Peters, who battled a 1989 outbreak of the virus among
research monkeys housed in Virginia and who later led the CDC's most far-
reaching study of Ebola's transmissibility in humans, said he would not ruleout the possibility that it spreads through the air in tight quarters. "We just
don't have the data to exclude it," said Peters, who continues to research
viral diseases at the University of Texas in Galveston. Which is true since
no one wants to mess with it.
In a small number of cases of the Zaire and Sudan strains, patients did
not have contact with the blood or body fluids of other viremic patients. In
these few cases, it is possible that the patients contracted the virus via
aerosol transmission. Although the Zaire and Sudan strains are not usually
passed from human to human by aerosol, the Reston strain is transmitted via
small-particle aerosol between monkeys and from monkeys to humans. In
addition, Ebola Zaire and Marburg virus have been isolated from the alveoli of
infected monkeys.
8/11/2019 MARBURG GREEN MONKEY FEVER VIRUS MUTATED IN 9 YEARS INTO EBOLA
Respiratory protection is broadly regulated by OSHA under the general
industry standard for respiratory protection (29CFR1910.134)764 which
requires that U.S. employers in all employment settings implement aprogram to protect employees from inhalation of toxic materials. OSHA
program components include medical clearance to wear a respirator;
provision and use of appropriate respirators, including fit-tested NIOSH-
certified N95 and higher particulate filtering respirators; education on
respirator use and periodic re-evaluation of the respiratory protection
program. When selecting particulate respirators, models with inherently
good fit characteristics (i.e., those expected to provide protection factors of
10 or more to 95% of wearers) are preferred and could theoretically relievethe need for fit testing 765, 766. Issues pertaining to respiratory protection
remain the subject of ongoing debate. Information on various types of
respirators may be found at
www.cdc.gov/niosh/npptl/respirators/respsars.html
and in published studies 765, 767, 768. A user-seal check (formerly called
a "fit check") should be performed by the wearer of a respirator each time a
respirator is donned to minimize air leakage around the facepiece 769. The
optimal frequency of fit-testing has not been determined; re-testing may be
indicated if there is a change in facial features of the wearer, onset of a
medical condition that would affect respiratory function in the wearer, or a
change in the model or size of the initially assigned respirator 12.
Respiratory protection was first recommended for protection of preventing
U.S. healthcare personnel from exposure to M. tuberculosis in 1989. That
recommendation has been maintained in two successive revisions of the
Guidelines for Prevention of Transmission of Tuberculosis in Hospitals and
other Healthcare Settings 12, 126. The incremental benefit from respiratoruse, in addition to administrative and engineering controls (i.e., AIIRs, early
recognition of patients likely to have tuberculosis and prompt placement in
an AIIR, and maintenance of a patient with suspected tuberculosis in an
AIIR until no longer infectious), for preventing transmission of airborne
infectious agents (e.g., M. tuberculosis) is undetermined. Although some
studies have demonstrated effective prevention of M. tuberculosis
transmission in hospitals where surgical masks, instead of respirators, were
used in conjunction with other administrative and engineering controls 637,770, 771, CDC currently recommends N95 or higher level respirators for
personnel exposed to patients with suspected or confirmed tuberculosis.
Currently this is also true for other diseases that could be transmitted
through the airborne route, including SARS 262 and smallpox 108, 129,
772, until inhalational transmission is better defined or healthcare-specific
protective equipment more suitable for for preventing infection are
developed. Respirators are also currently recommended to be worn during
the performance of aerosol-generating procedures (e.g., intubation,
bronchoscopy, suctioning) on patients withSARS Co-V infection, avian
influenza and pandemic influenza (See Appendix A).
Procedures for safe removal of respirators are provided (Figure). In some
healthcare settings, particulate respirators used to provide care for patients
with M. tuberculosis are reused by the same HCW. This is an acceptable
practice providing the respirator is not damaged or soiled, the fit is not
compromised by change in shape, and the respirator has not been
contaminated with blood or body fluids. There are no data on which to basea recommendation for the length of time a respirator may be reused.
spending our time talking about quarantines [of entire countries]. We don‟t
have an epidemic, and for that reason I don‟t think that calling for a
quarantine of countries answers the question. We have to turn internally
and look at our own selves and make sure our health infrastructure is
where it needs to be.” So don‟t try to nip it in the bud. The Black leadershipdoesn‟t want it I don‟t know about their constituents.
SOON AMERICA WILL BE FLOODED WITH AFRICANS WHO ARE
SEEKING TREATMENT FOR EBOLA
Last Updated Oct 22, 2014 10:01 AM EDT
An airline passenger was being evaluated at a hospital inNewark, New Jersey Tuesday due to Ebola concerns, reportsCBS New York. Two others were hospitalized after getting offplanes into Chicago.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention spokespersonCarol Crawford said the Newark passenger was "identified asreporting symptoms or having a potential exposure to Ebola"during the enhanced screening process for those arriving inthe U.S. from the West African nations of Liberia, SierraLeone and Guinea.