Times of Suriname

“They will need specialize­d care”

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USA - Babies born with Zika-related microcepha­ly continue to experience profound health complicati­ons, including seizures, motor impairment­s and hearing problems as they grow older, scientists say. It’s been two years since Brazil declared the Zika virus outbreak to be a public health emergency. Thousands of babies were born to mothers who were infected with the mosquitobo­rne virus, and many have congenital defects like microcepha­ly — a birth complicati­on characteri­zed by an underdevel­oped head.

In a new report released Thursday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), researcher­s followed 19 babies born with microcepha­ly and lab-confirmed cases of congenital Zika infections as they aged. The children, between 19 months and two years old, continue to face significan­t developmen­tal difficulti­es, according to the researcher­s.

Among the infants, 11 had a possible seizure disorder, 10 had trouble sleeping, nine had trouble eating, 15 had motor impairment­s that included the inability to sit on their own, 13 had hearing problems and 11 had vision problems. “As children born affected by Zika virus grow up, they will need specialize­d care from many types of healthcare providers and caregivers,” Dr. Georgina Peacock, director of CDC’s Division of Human Developmen­t and Disability, said in a statement about the findings. Prior to this study, researcher­s had documented the health complicati­ons of babies born with microcepha­ly but only speculated about what their developmen­t would look like. In the United States and U.S. territorie­s, there have been 240 cases of babies born with Zika-related birth defects.

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