American gets blood from Ebola survivor
Associated Press
OMAHA, Neb.
An American aid worker infected with Ebola has been given blood from a fellow doctor who battled the disease, and Nebraska doctors say the man has responded well to aggressive treatment in the past week.
Dr. Rick Sacra received two blood transfusions from Dr. Kent Brantly last weekend after arriving at the Nebraska Medical Center, Dr. Phil Smith said Thursday. Dr. Sacra also has been given an experimental drug that doctors refuse to identify, and he has received supportive care including IV fluids.
Dr. Sacra is close friends with Dr. Brantly, one of the first two Americans treated for Ebola in Atlanta last month, from their missionary work.
“It really meant a lot to us that he was willing to give that donation so quickly after his own recovery,” Dr. Sacra’s wife, Debbie, said.
Dr. Sacra, 51, and Dr. Brantly, 33, both arrived at the hospital in Omaha last Friday. Brantly tried to visit with Dr. Sacra over a video conference after he donated his blood to the hospital’s blood bank for testing, but Debbie Sacra said Thursday her husband doesn’t remember that encounter. The blood was reduced to plasma before the first transfusion.
These blood transfusions are believed to help a patient fight off the Ebola virus because the survivor’s blood carries antibodies for the disease.
More than 2,200 people have died in West Africa during the current Ebola outbreak, although Ebola hasn’t been confirmed as the cause of all those deaths. Debbie Sacra said she hopes her husband’s illness and the experience of other aid workers can lead to new treatments for Ebola before the outbreak spreads beyond West Africa.
Rick Sacra, who had been working at a hospital in Liberia with the North Carolina-based charity SIM, was the third American aid worker with the Ebola virus to be flown to the U.S. for treatment.
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