Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) is a zoonotic disease that can cause mild pneumonia to severe respiratory infections in humans. The virus only produces a little infection in dromedary camels, but it transmits quickly amongst them. The behavior of the virus varies from person to person and between humans and dromedary camels, which emphasizes the part played by host variables in MERS-CoV pathogenesis and transmission. It results in a high temperature, cough, acute respiratory tract infection, and multiorgan dysfunction that may ultimately cause the infection victims to pass away In order to control MERS-CoV infection, no medication has yet received clinical approval. To avoid the negative effects of future epidemics like this one, a number of sensible precautions should be implemented. The development of efficient therapeutic and preventative anti-MERS-CoV infections, as well as further research into the epidemiology and pathogenesis of the virus, are all required.
Amber Qureshi (Sun,) studied this question.