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General Practice

Lassa Fever: symptoms, causes & treatment

Also known as rat fever, viral haemorrhagic fever.

This page is general health information, not a diagnosis. Always consult a licensed clinician about your own health.

Overview

Lassa fever is a viral haemorrhagic illness spread mainly through food or household items contaminated by infected rodents. It is found in parts of West Africa and is occasionally seen in returning travellers, so it is mainly relevant to people who have recently visited an affected area. Early symptoms resemble other tropical fevers, which is why a fever after travel that does not improve needs urgent review. Early hospital treatment greatly improves survival.

Symptoms

  • Fever and general weakness
  • Headache
  • Sore throat
  • Muscle and chest pain
  • Nausea, vomiting or diarrhoea
  • Bleeding from gums, nose or other sites (late, severe sign)
  • Hearing problems during recovery

Causes & risk factors

  • Contact with food or surfaces contaminated by rat urine or droppings
  • Eating rats or poorly stored grains
  • Contact with body fluids of an infected person
  • Poor food storage that attracts rodents

Treatment & self-care

Suspected Lassa fever needs immediate referral to a hospital or designated treatment centre, where antiviral treatment and supportive care are given under isolation — seek emergency care rather than self-medicating at home. Tell the clinical team about any recent travel so the right precautions are taken. In affected areas, storing food in covered containers and keeping homes rodent-free reduces risk.

See a doctor urgently if

  • Fever after recent travel to a West African area where Lassa fever occurs
  • Fever with sore throat, vomiting and severe weakness
  • Any unusual bleeding from gums, nose, eyes or in urine or stool — seek emergency care
  • Fever after contact with a sick person from an outbreak area

This condition can be an emergency. If any of the signs above are severe or getting worse, go to the nearest emergency room now or call your local emergency number — do not wait for an online consultation.

Frequently asked questions

What are the first signs of Lassa Fever?
Early signs often include fever and general weakness, headache, sore throat. Symptoms vary from person to person, so a proper assessment by a doctor is the only way to be sure.
Can Lassa Fever be treated?
Suspected Lassa fever needs immediate referral to a hospital or designated treatment centre, where antiviral treatment and supportive care are given under isolation — seek emergency care rather than self-medicating at home. Tell the clinical team about any recent travel so the right precautions are taken. In affected areas, storing food in covered containers and keeping homes rodent-free reduces risk.
When should I see a doctor about Lassa Fever?
See a doctor promptly if you notice: fever after recent travel to a west african area where lassa fever occurs; fever with sore throat, vomiting and severe weakness; any unusual bleeding from gums, nose, eyes or in urine or stool — seek emergency care; fever after contact with a sick person from an outbreak area. These can be signs of an emergency — if severe, go to the nearest emergency room or call your local emergency number.

Talk to the right specialist

Lassa Fever is usually handled by general practice. See an online general practice doctor in minutes on iHealix.

Related conditions

Lab tests that may help