Hartley Caleb, Bavinger J Clay, Kuthyar Sanjana, Shantha Jessica G, Yeh Steven
Department of Global Health, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA.
Department of Ophthalmology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Microorganisms. 2020 Apr 20;8(4):594. doi: 10.3390/microorganisms8040594.
Ebola virus disease (EVD) and emerging infectious disease threats continue to threaten life, prosperity and global health security. To properly counteract EVD, an improved understanding of the long-term impact of recent EVD outbreaks in West Africa and the Democratic Republic of Congo are needed. In the wake of recent outbreaks, numerous health sequelae were identified in EVD survivors. These findings include joint pains, headaches, myalgias, and uveitis, a vision-threatening inflammatory condition of the eye. Retrospective and more recent prospective studies of EVD survivors from West Africa have demonstrated that uveitis may occur in 13-34% of patients with an increase in prevalence from baseline to 12-month follow-up. The clinical spectrum of disease ranges from mild, anterior uveitis to severe, sight-threatening panuveitis. Untreated inflammation may ultimately lead to secondary complications of cataract and posterior synechiae, with resultant vision impairment. The identification of Ebola virus persistence in immune privileged organs, such as the eye, with subsequent tissue inflammation and edema may lead to vision loss. Non-human primate models of EVD have demonstrated tissue localization to the eye including macrophage reservoirs within the vitreous matter. Moreover, in vitro models of Ebola virus have shown permissiveness in retinal pigment epithelial cells, potentially contributing to viral persistence. Broad perspectives from epidemiologic studies of the outbreak, animal modeling, and immunologic studies of EVD survivors have demonstrated the spectrum of the eye disease, tissue specificity of Ebola virus infection, and antigen-specific immunologic response. Further studies in these areas will elucidate the mechanisms of this highly prevalent disease with the potential for improved therapeutics for Ebola virus in immune-privileged sites.
埃博拉病毒病(EVD)以及新出现的传染病威胁持续危及生命、繁荣和全球卫生安全。为了妥善应对埃博拉病毒病,需要更好地了解近期在西非和刚果民主共和国爆发的埃博拉病毒病疫情所产生的长期影响。在近期疫情爆发之后,在埃博拉病毒病幸存者身上发现了众多健康后遗症。这些发现包括关节疼痛、头痛、肌痛以及葡萄膜炎,后者是一种威胁视力的眼部炎症性疾病。对西非埃博拉病毒病幸存者进行的回顾性研究以及近期的前瞻性研究表明,13%至34%的患者可能会出现葡萄膜炎,从基线到12个月随访期间患病率有所上升。疾病的临床范围从轻度的前葡萄膜炎到严重的、威胁视力的全葡萄膜炎。未经治疗的炎症最终可能导致白内障和后粘连等继发性并发症,从而造成视力损害。在免疫赦免器官(如眼睛)中发现埃博拉病毒持续存在,随后出现组织炎症和水肿,可能会导致视力丧失。埃博拉病毒病的非人灵长类动物模型已证明病毒在眼部的组织定位,包括玻璃体内的巨噬细胞储存库。此外,埃博拉病毒的体外模型已显示在视网膜色素上皮细胞中具有易感性,这可能导致病毒持续存在。对疫情的流行病学研究、动物建模以及对埃博拉病毒病幸存者的免疫学研究的广泛视角,已经展示了眼部疾病的范围、埃博拉病毒感染的组织特异性以及抗原特异性免疫反应。在这些领域的进一步研究将阐明这种高度流行疾病的发病机制,有望改善对免疫赦免部位埃博拉病毒的治疗方法。