A 9-month-old infant died from Ebola with no known epidemiological link. The parents did not report previous illness, but laboratory tests revealed persistent EBOV RNA in the mother's breast milk and in the father's semen. Genomic analysis strongly suggests transmission of the virus to the child through breastfeeding. This is a case report published in Clinical Infectious Diseases in 2017. Breast milk contained detectable EBOV RNA despite the absence of reported illness in the mother. The study highlights the asymptomatic persistence of the virus in breast milk as a source of vertical transmission.[1][3]