LYCOS RETRIEVER
Ebola: Vomiting
built 291 days ago
Ebola Syndrome is an essential movie for everyone who has even the least interest in gore movies. While less shocking than the preceding Wong-Yau collaboration The Untold Story, it's a lot less vile and much easier to stomach. As such, it's ... a good starting point for those who'd like to get familiar with the sleazier side of cinema. Crazy, gross, nasty, and above all: infinitely enjoyable. A masterpiece of its genre.
Source:
The Ebola virus particles then infiltrate the bloodstream of the host and keep attaching themselves to cells everywhere. Here the procedure of replication is repeated until the tissue becomes saturated with virus crystal bricks.
Source:
Ebola shows potential as a biological weapon because of its lethality but due to its relatively short incubation period it may be more difficult to spread since it may kill its victim before it has a chance to be transmitted. As a result, some developers have considered breeding it with other agents such as smallpox[22] to create so-called chimera viruses.
Source:
In recent years, terrorism experts have raised fears that the Ebola virus could be turned into an aerosol and sprayed into the air as part of a bioterrorism attack. There have been allegations that the former Soviet Union built large stockpiles of Ebola virus with the intention of possibly aerosolizing the virus in the form of weapons of mass destruction.
Source:
Stackig Advertising and Public Relations [35] This company boasts that its crisis plan was the one that was used when the deadly Ebola virus was discovered in a laboratory in northern Virginia. The crisis plan, it says, minimized "the negative impact on the company that operated the lab."
Source:
In Central Africa, in the area currently affected by Ebola, two great apes exist: the Western lowland gorilla (Gorilla gorilla gorilla) and the Central chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes troglodytes). Before the current crisis, up to 110,000 Western lowland gorillas and between 47,000 and 78,000 Central chimpanzees were thought to remain. In some areas, more than 90% of the population of Western lowland gorilla and Central chimpanzee have been killed.
Source: