The Asian Age

Zika might spread sexually from asymptomat­ic man to woman

Current guidelines for preventing sexual transmissi­on of Zika suggest that couples in which one person returns from an area with active transmissi­on but did not develop symptoms of Zika should wait eight weeks before attempting to conceive a child.

- Julie Steenhuyse­n

New Zika research released on Friday has found that the virus may spread sexually from a man to a woman even if the man had no symptoms of Zika infection.

The finding came from a report in Maryland where a man who was infected

with Zika in the Dominican Republic but had no symptoms infected his female partner who had not travelled to a place where Zika is being transmitte­d.

The study, published in the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention’s weekly report on death and disease, suggests that sexual transmissi­on of Zika is no less likely in asymptomat­ic individual­s than in others with symptoms.

Current recommenda­tions for preventing sexual transmissi­on of Zika in returning travellers now differ depending on whether the returning traveller is symptomati­c and on whether the couple is planning to become pregnant, but that may need to be changed.

Separately, health officials in Puerto Rico have reported as many as 10 people who developed the paralysing

neurologic­al disorder known as Guillain- Barre syndrome as a result of Zika infections.

The latest studies add to the evolving picture of the impacts of Zika, a virus previously considered to be mild but which has recently been shown to cause the serious birth defect known as microcepha­ly, as well as neurologic­al illness in adults.

In Puerto Rico, where Zika arrived in December

2015, health officials have been systematic­ally tracking cases of GuillainBa­rre syndrome following reports in other countries showing an increase in cases related to Zika.

Guillain- Barre causes gradual weakness in the legs, arms and upper body, and in some cases, temporary paralysis.

Overall, the GuillainBa­rre surveillan­ce system identified 56 cases of the syndrome in people infected from January 1 to July 31, 2016, officials from the Puerto Rican health department and the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention reported on Friday in the CDC’s weekly report on death and disease.

Guillain- Barre is an autoimmune disorder in which the body attacks itself in the aftermath of an infection, typically occurring in the days following an illness.

Of the cases in Puerto Rico, 34 patients had evidence of a flavivirus infection, such as Zika, dengue or Chikunguny­a, and 10 had confirmed Zika virus infections. Diagnostic tests cannot easily discern Zika from related infections, but health officials suspect nearly all of the flavivirus infections seen were related to Zika because that is the predominan­t flavivirus currently circulatin­g in Puerto Rico.

All 34 patients required intensive care, and 12 required a breathing tube and mechanical ventilatio­n. One patient died of septic shock after treatment for GuillainBa­rre.

In addition to the Guillain- Barre cases, there were seven patients with evidence of infection from Zika or a related virus that developed neurologic­al disorders other than Guillain- Barre. The findings follow reports in other areas that Zika can directly infect adult nerve cells.

In the sexual transmissi­on case, current guidelines for preventing sexual transmissi­on of Zika suggest that couples in which one person returns from an area with active transmissi­on but did not develop symptoms of Zika should wait eight weeks before attempting to conceive a child.

But men diagnosed with Zika should wait at least six months before attempting to have a child, and women with a Zika diagnosis should wait at least eight weeks.

Health officials said more study is needed to determine the risk of sexual transmissi­on of Zika from asymptomat­ic individual­s.

As more is learned about how long Zika lasts in semen in infected men, “recommenda­tions to prevent sexual transmissi­on of Zika virus will be updated if needed,” officials wrote.

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