- 1 Stay home — do NOT go to the emergency room without calling first
- 2 Call emergency services and mention your travel (sub-Saharan Africa, caves, mines)
- 3 Isolate in a separate room, avoid all physical contact
- 4 Follow the instructions of the medical dispatcher
🌡️ When should I be concerned?
Marburg spreads through direct contact with blood or body fluids of an infected person, or through contact with Egyptian fruit bats (Rousettus aegyptiacus) in caves and mines. It does NOT spread through the air.
- Fever ≥ 38°C (100.4°F) within 21 days of travel in sub-Saharan Africa (especially cave visits), or contact with a Marburg case
- + any of these: unexplained bleeding, severe vomiting, severe diarrhea, skin rash, intense muscle pain
- Visiting caves or mines with fruit bats (Africa, equatorial regions)
- Direct contact with a confirmed Marburg case (healthcare worker, family member)
- Handling bats or non-human primates
- Laboratory worker handling potentially infected specimens
- Air or breathing
- Coughing or sneezing
- Water or food (in Europe)
- Mosquitoes or insects
- Contact with asymptomatic people
- Public transportation
📅 Day-by-day disease progression
Incubation: 2 to 21 days (median: 5–9 days)
Prodromal phase — severe flu-like illness
- Sudden fever ≥ 38.5°C, chills
- Severe headache
- Myalgias and arthralgias
- Severe fatigue, general malaise
⚠️ Patient is contagious as soon as symptoms appear. Difficult to distinguish from malaria or influenza without epidemiological context.
GI phase and skin rash
- Nausea, vomiting, watery diarrhea
- Abdominal and chest pain
- Non-pruritic maculopapular rash (trunk, back)
- Conjunctivitis (red eyes)
The skin rash is characteristic and points toward a viral hemorrhagic fever. Risk of severe dehydration.
Hemorrhagic phase (severe cases)
- Bleeding from gums, nose, ears
- Hematemesis (bloody vomit)
- Melena (bloody stools)
- Multi-organ failure (liver, kidney, CNS)
- Confusion, extreme agitation (neurological involvement)
Neurological signs — confusion and agitation — are more prominent in Marburg than Ebola. All body fluids are highly infectious.
Recovery or death
- Death: average D8–D9 in fatal cases (hemorrhagic shock or sepsis)
- Survivors: prolonged fatigue, arthralgias, orchitis in males
- Sequelae: uveitis, residual hepatitis, post-viral psychosis
- Recovery confirmed by 2 negative PCR tests 48h apart
Note: virus may persist in semen after recovery. Serological follow-up recommended for 3 months.
❓ Frequently asked questions
📊 Major outbreaks (1967–2026)
| Year | Country | Cases | Deaths | CFR |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1967 | Germany / Yugoslavia | 31 | 7 | 23% |
| 1998–2000 | DR Congo | 154 | 128 | 83% |
| 2005 | Angola | 252 | 227 | 90% |
| 2007 | Uganda | 4 | 3 | 75% |
| 2012 | Uganda | 15 | 4 | 27% |
| 2023 | Equatorial Guinea | 17 | 12 | 71% |
| 2023 | Tanzania | 9 | 6 | 67% |
| 2024 | Rwanda | 66 | 15 | 23% |
| 2026 | No active outbreak | — | — | — |
Sources: WHO Disease Outbreak News · CDC Marburg hemorrhagic fever · Data as of June 21, 2026
🔗 Related pages
📚 Official sources
- WHO — Marburg virus disease fact sheet, 2023
- CDC — Marburg hemorrhagic fever (MHF), 2024
- ECDC — Marburg virus disease outbreak in Rwanda, 2024
- WHO DON 2023 — Marburg virus disease in Equatorial Guinea
- WHO DON 2024 — Marburg virus disease in Rwanda
- Towner JS et al. PLoS Pathog 2009 — Isolation of genetically diverse Marburg viruses from Egyptian fruit bats
- Gear JSS et al. BMJ 1975 — Outbreaks of Marburg virus disease
Last updated: June 21, 2026 · By Dr Clément MÉDEAU, MD (La Rochelle, France)