5 Ebola patients in Kikwit outbreak had no physical contact to explain transmission, and scientists suggest other mechanisms
The following paper was written by CDC scientists in 1999.
Ebola Hemorrhagic Fever, Kikwit, Democratic Republic of the Congo, 1995: risk factors for patients without a reported exposure.
Abstract
Here is the free full text, from which the next 2 paragraphs were extracted:
determined to have had previous exposure to a case of EHF, 19 had merely
visited another patient with EHF and were not involved in patient care. None
reportedly had any contact with patient blood, feces, vomitus, urine, or
saliva, although 14 reported touching a patient with EHF. Recent
immunohistochemical examination of skin biopsy specimens from patients with EHF
has demonstrated viral antigens in skin and sweat glands [16], supporting the
hypothesis that EHF may have been transmitted to these individuals in Kikwit
(and others in previous outbreaks) by brief, unnoticed, superficial contact
with EHF-in-fected persons.
The transmission mode in the 5 patients who
became infected without any physical contact remains enigmatic. However, animal
experiments have documented transmission of EBO virus via noncontact routes.
For example, both guinea pigs and monkeys have been infected experimentally
with EBO virus by direct installation of drops into the eye and throat [17].
Transmission of EBO virus from experimentally infected monkeys to control
monkeys in separate cages has also been documented [18]. Furthermore, airborne
spread was suggested during the EBO epizootic outbreak in Reston, Virginia [19,
20, 21]. In a review, Peters et al. [22] concluded that although the major mode
of interhuman transmission of hemorrhagic fevers is direct contact,
transmission via large droplets, aerosolized particles, or fomites cannot be
excluded. This may explain the mode of transmission in the 5 patients without
reported physical contact