Viral hemorrhagic (hem-uh-RAJ-ik) fevers are infectious diseases that can be life-threatening. They can damage the walls of tiny blood vessels, making them leak. And they can keep the blood from clotting.
Some viral hemorrhagic fevers include:
These diseases most often happen in tropical areas, such as Central Africa. In the United States, most people who get them have traveled to one of those areas.
There are vaccines and treatments for only a few types of viral hemorrhagic fevers. Until there are vaccines for more of them, do your best to keep from getting viral hemorrhagic fevers.
Symptoms of viral hemorrhagic fevers vary by disease. Mainly, early symptoms can include:
Worse symptoms include:
The best time to see a healthcare professional is before you travel to a country where you might get an infectious disease. Then you can get vaccinations and pre-travel advice for staying healthy.
If you get symptoms once you return home from your trip, talk to a healthcare professional. If possible, see one trained in international medicine or infectious diseases. Tell your care professional where you've traveled.
Viral hemorrhagic fevers are spread by contact with infected animals. The viruses that cause viral hemorrhagic fevers live in many animal hosts. Most often, the hosts include mosquitoes, ticks, rodents, nonhuman primates or bats.
Mosquito or tick bites spread some viral hemorrhagic fevers. Infected body fluids, such as blood, saliva or semen, spread other viral hemorrhagic fevers. You can get a few types by inhaling infected rat feces or urine.
Some viral hemorrhagic fevers also can spread from person to person.
If you travel to an area where a hemorrhagic fever is common, you can be infected there but not get symptoms until after you return home. It might take from 2 to 21 days to get symptoms. It depends on the type of virus.
Living in or traveling to an area where a certain viral hemorrhagic fever is common raises your risk of getting infected with that virus. Other factors that can increase your risk include:
Viral hemorrhagic fevers can cause:
It can be hard to prevent viral hemorrhagic fevers. If you live in, work in or travel to areas where these diseases are common, use protective barriers when working with blood or body fluids. For instance, wear gloves, gowns, eye masks and face shields. Also take care working with lab specimens and waste.
The yellow fever vaccine is mainly safe and works well. But rarely, serious side effects can happen. The yellow fever vaccine isn't for children younger than 9 months of age, pregnant people or people whose immune systems don't work well.
There's also an Ebola vaccination that protects against one type of Ebola. It's for healthcare professionals who work in areas of outbreak. Check with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention about the countries you plan to visit. For some, you must prove that you've been vaccinated.
Do your best to stay away from mosquitoes and ticks when traveling in areas that have outbreaks of viral hemorrhagic fevers. Wear light-colored long pants and long-sleeved shirts. Or, even better, wear clothes coated with permethrin. Don't put permethrin on the skin.
Try not to be outside at dusk and dawn when mosquitoes are most active. Put mosquito repellent with a 20% to 25% concentration of DEET on your skin and clothing. If you're staying in tents or hotels, use bed nets and mosquito coils.
If you live where there are outbreaks of viral hemorrhagic fevers, take steps to keep rodents out of your home:
If you think you might have a viral hemorrhagic fever, contact your healthcare professional. Let the office know what you think you have. You might be sent directly to an emergency room. Make sure the emergency room knows that you might have a viral hemorrhagic fever before you go.
Diagnosing viral hemorrhagic fevers in the first few days of illness can be hard. Early symptoms, such as high fever, muscle aches, headaches and extreme tiredness, are common to many other conditions.
Tell your healthcare professional about your medical and travel history and whether you've been around animals, especially mosquitoes, ticks, rodents, nonhuman primates or bats.
Name the countries you visited and the dates. Tell of any contact you might have had with infection sources.
Lab tests, most often using a blood sample, can confirm a diagnosis. You most often have these tests in special labs. That's because viral hemorrhagic fevers are so easy to catch.
There's no treatment for most viral hemorrhagic fevers other than supportive care.
The antiviral medicine ribavirin (Virazole) might shorten the course of some infections, such as Lassa fever. And the Food and Drug Administration has approved monoclonal antibody therapies Inmazeb and Ebanga to treat Ebola.
Supportive care may help you feel better while your body fights the infection. For instance, to keep from losing too much fluid, called dehydration, you might need to get fluids through a vein in an arm, called IV. This can help keep the balance of minerals needed for nerves and muscles to work, called electrolytes.
Kidney dialysis might help some people. Kidney dialysis removes wastes from the blood when the kidneys fail.
If you think you might have a viral hemorrhagic fever, contact your healthcare professional. Let the office know what you think you have. You might be sent directly to an emergency room. Make sure the emergency room knows that you might have a viral hemorrhagic fever before you go.
Your healthcare professional is likely to ask you several questions, including: