Lassa fever natural history, complications and prognosis
Lassa fever Microchapters |
Diagnosis |
---|
Treatment |
Case Studies |
Lassa fever natural history, complications and prognosis On the Web |
American Roentgen Ray Society Images of Lassa fever natural history, complications and prognosis |
FDA on Lassa fever natural history, complications and prognosis |
CDC on Lassa fever natural history, complications and prognosis |
Lassa fever natural history, complications and prognosis in the news |
Blogs on Lassa fever natural history, complications and prognosis |
Risk calculators and risk factors for Lassa fever natural history, complications and prognosis |
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Ammu Susheela, M.D. [2]
Overview
Following exposure, infected patients remain asymptomatic for approximately 3 to 21 days. The majority of patients experience no or mild clinical manifestations. Typically, patients first develop persistent high-grade fever and other non-specific signs and symptoms. If left untreated, the majority of cases self-resolve without intervention. However, in the minority of cases, clinical manifestations may progress to hemorrhage, deafness, abdominal/chest pain, pleural/pericardial effusions and ascites, and facial edema. Eventually, manifestations progress to include convulsions, hypovolemic shock, coma, and eventually death. The most common complications of Lassa fever are neurosensory deafness and hepatic injury, which may be a mild hepatitis or fulminant hepatic necrosis. Although prognosis of Lassa fever is generally good, development of complications, pregnancy, infancy, are associated with poorer prognosis and increased risk of death.
Natural History
Incubation Period
- Infected patients remain asymptomatic for 3 to 21 days following exposure.[1]
Development of Clinical Manifestations
- The majority of patients experience no or mild symptoms. Only a minority (approximately 15-20%) of patients experience multiorgan dysfunction, and typically 5-15% of infected patients die of Lassa fever.
- Patients typically first develop persistent high-grade fever (39 °C to 41 °C) and other non-specific symptoms, such as muscle aches, conjunctival injection, headache, sore throat, nausea, and vomiting.
- If left untreated, the majority of patients self-resolve without any intervention.
- In a minority of cases, patients may develop worsening abdominal/chest pain, temporary/permanent deafness, facial edema, mucosal bleeding and hemorrhage, pulmonary edema, pleural/pericardial effusions or ascites, multi-organ failure, and shock.
- Prolonged and worsening symptoms are usually associated with worsening prognosis, typically resulting in convulsions, encephalitis, seizures, coma and finally death.
- The following table demonstrates the 4 clinical stages of Lassa fever (adapted from McCarthy et al. 2002[2])
Stage | Typical Symptoms | Days Since Symptom-onset |
Stage 1 | High-grade fever (39-41 °C), malaise, weakness | day-1 to day-3 |
Stage 2 | Headache, backache, chest pain, sore throat with exudation, abdominal pain, diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, hypotension, anemia, proteinuria, conjunctivitis | day-4 to day-7 |
Stage 3 | Mucosal bleeding, internal bleeding, facial edema, confusion, disorientation and convulsion | Beyond day-7 |
Stage 4 | Coma, death | Beyond day-14
} ComplicationsComplications of Lassa fever include the following:
Prognosis
References
|