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(Lisa DeJong)

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Transportation Security Administration is disinfecting all the security checkpoints at Cleveland Hopkins International Airport as a precaution because a passenger later identified with the Ebola virus traveled through the airport on Monday.

The Ebola patient who flew from Cleveland to Dallas/Forth Worth went through the central security checkpoint at Hopkins, prompting the TSA to do a disinfectant wipe-down of that screening checkpoint this afternoon.

TSA spokesman Mark Howell said the agency also decided to clean the north and south checkpoints at Hopkins. None of the checkpoints are expected to be fully closed at any point. Rather, there will be individual lane closures.

"It's nothing official," Howell said, noting that the precaution wasn't undertaken at the direction of the Centers for Disease Control. "It's just something that our folks wanted to do, in an overabundance of caution."

Howell, a regional spokesman for TSA, said the agency's closed circuit television system identified which of the TSA checkpoints Akron native Amber Joy Vinson went through when she traveled Monday from Cleveland to Dallas/Fort Worth on Frontier Flight 1143.

Frontier is doing a repeat cleaning of that jet today at a site inside the perimeter of Hopkins, near the I-X Center.

Vinson received a bachelor's degree in science from Kent State University and has been a registered nurse in Texas since 2012, according to the Dallas Morning News.

She is the second Texas nurse confirmed with Ebola. She flew to Ohio Oct. 8 and returned to Texas on Oct. 13, spending time visiting her family in Akron while here, according to the Ohio Department of Health.

Vinson, who'd gone to Ohio to visit her mother, was not symptomatic when she boarded the flight to Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport. But she had a low-grade fever of 99.5 at the time, and because of her contact with Thomas Eric Duncan, Dallas' initial Ebola patient, she should not have been traveling at all, according to the CDC.