Publication | Open Access
Marburg Hemorrhagic Fever in Durba and Watsa, Democratic Republic of the Congo: Clinical Documentation, Features of Illness, and Treatment
79
Citations
9
References
2007
Year
Marburg Hemorrhagic FeverDisease DiagnosisClinical FindingPatient SafetyDiagnosisTerminal SymptomsClinical DocumentationDisease OutbreakEmerging Infectious DiseaseMedicineDemocratic RepublicEpidemiologyEmergency MedicineClinical Conundrum
The objective of the present study was to describe day of onset and duration of symptoms of Marburg hemorrhagic fever (MHF), to summarize the treatments applied, and to assess the quality of clinical documentation. Surveillance and clinical records of 77 patients with MHF cases were reviewed. Initial symptoms included fever, headache, general pain, nausea, vomiting, and anorexia (median day of onset, day 1-2), followed by hemorrhagic manifestations (day 5-8+), and terminal symptoms included confusion, agitation, coma, anuria, and shock. Treatment in isolation wards was acceptable, but the quality of clinical documentation was unsatisfactory. Improved clinical documentation is necessary for a basic evaluation of supportive treatment.
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