Brazil authorities say two suspected Ebola cases tested negative


SAO PAULO, June ⁠1 (Reuters) - Brazil has cleared two suspected ⁠cases of Ebola after both patients tested ‌negative for the virus, local authorities said on Monday.

The suspected cases emerged over the weekend from patients with related ​symptoms who had recently been ⁠in the Democratic ⁠Republic of Congo, where the current Ebola outbreak ⁠is centered, ‌and in neighboring Uganda, which has also reported cases.

The patients in ⁠Brazil had tested positive for other diseases, ​but local ‌authorities waited for Ebola test results to rule ⁠out the ​cases.

Brazil's state of Sao Paulo said no genetic material of Ebola was found in the ⁠testing of a 37-year-old man ​who came from the Democratic Republic of Congo, and who had already tested positive for meningitis.

In ⁠Rio de Janeiro, a patient who had recently traveled to Uganda also tested negative for Ebola, health research institute Fiocruz and the ​city hall said in ⁠separate statements. The patient had tested positive for ​malaria.

(Reporting by Eduardo Simoes and ‌Andre Romani in Sao ​Paulo, and Rodrigo Viga Gaier in Rio de Janeiro; Editing by Bill Berkrot)

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