A few days after he accidentally stuck himself with a needle in an Ebola ward in Sierra Leone, Lewis Rubinson's temperature topped 103 degrees. The fever swept in with a headache, muscle pain and nausea. And, soon after he arrived for care at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md., it brought on the bone-shaking shivers doctors call rigors.
Exposed: After an accidental needle stab, a doctor's Ebola watch begins
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