The World Health Organisation (WHO) has issued an interim advice on the possibility of Ebola Virus being sexually transmitted.
As
a result, the organisation has directed all Ebola survivors and their
sexual partners to receive counseling to guard against possible
transmission of the disease.
This is contained in a statement made available by WHO to newsmen in Lagos on Saturday.
WHO stated:
The
sexual transmission of the Ebola Virus from males to females is a
strong possibility, but has not yet been proven; less probable, but
theoretically possible. Studies have shown that Ebola virus can be
isolated from semen up to 82 days after symptom onset.
A
recent case investigation identified genetic material (RNA) from the
virus by nucleic acid amplification tests (such as RT-PCR) 199 days
after symptom onset.
This is well beyond the period of virus detecting ability in the blood of survivors and long after recovery from illness.
The
detection of virus genetic material many months after symptom onset is
assumed to reflect the continuing, or at least very recent, presence of
live and potentially transmissible Ebola virus.
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