Scientists are reporting the first case of a baby born dead who had signs of Zika virus in tissues outside the brain and spinal tissue. A 20-year-old woman in Brazil gave birth to a stillborn child with signs of tissue swelling, severe microcephaly - a disorder characterised by an abnormally small head - and defects in the central nervous system (the brain and spinal cord).
The case, reported Thursday in the journal PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases, provides the first evidence that Zika can cause damage to tissues outside of the central nervous system in a foetus, researchers say.
Zika virus, which is spread primarily through bites from infected mosquitoes (but can also be transmitted through sex), has spread rapidly throughout Central and South America. Complicating the problem is the fact that only about 20 percent of infected people show symptoms, which include fever, rash, joint pain, and red eyes.
In Brazil, the country hardest hit by the disease, more than 4,500 microcephaly cases have been reported, according to the Brazilian Ministry of Health. There have been a total of seven cases so far of Zika virus in fetuses and newborns who died soon after birth.
A case of Zika infection in a stillbirth
The new study reports the case of a 20-year-old woman who had an abnormal fetal ultrasound in her 18th week of pregnancy. The foetus was found to be severely underweight for its age. The woman did not report having symptoms of Zika infection or similar diseases like dengue fever or chikungunya during her pregnancy, and was not diagnosed with any of these conditions.
Ultrasound scans at 26 and 30 weeks showed signs of microcephaly, and the foetus was missing most of its brain. It also had signs of hydrops fetalis, a condition where fluid builds up inside the foetus, causing tissue swelling.
Doctors detected the foetus was dead at 32 weeks and delivered the baby. When researchers examined its tissues, they found genetic material from the Zika virus in its brain, spinal fluid, and amniotic fluid (which nourishes the foetus), but not in the heart, lung, liver, eyes, or placenta.
The virus appeared to be the same strain as the one causing the current epidemic in the Americas.
The researchers cautioned that they could not extrapolate the risk to other pregnant women exposed to Zika from a single case. But given that many infections are asymptomatic, they suggested that pregnant women in high-risk areas who have stillbirths should be examined for signs of the virus.
A growing link between Zika and birth defects
The findings add to growing evidence of a link between Zika infection and microcephaly. Earlier this month, scientists published a study in the New England Journal of Medicine reporting the case of a pregnant woman likely infected with Zika who appears to have transmitted the virus to her foetus.
And a study in The Lancet Infectious Diseases reported that the virus had been found in the amniotic fluid of two pregnant women whose foetuses were diagnosed with microcephaly.
Authorities are still evaluating how the virus can be spread between mothers and infants. But the World Health Organisation released new guidelines on Thursday recommending that mothers who have or have had Zika virus continue to breastfeed their babies.
"In light of available evidence, the benefits of breastfeeding for the infant and mother outweigh any potential risk of Zika virus transmission through breast milk," the WHO said.
This article was originally published by Business Insider.
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