Albuquerque Journal

CDC: Zika causes birth defects in about 10% of pregnancie­s

Data support advice that pregnant women avoid infected areas

- MAYO CLINIC NEWS NETWORK

Among pregnant women in the U.S. with confirmed Zika virus, about one in 10 had a fetus or baby with birth defects.

That’s according to a new report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

“Initially, we knew pretty clearly that there was some associatio­n between Zika virus infection during pregnancy and some sort of malformati­on, such as microcepha­ly, in the unborn child — meaning if pregnant women are infected with Zika, there was a risk to the unborn child of having some sort of birth defect,” says Mayo Clinic infectious diseases specialist Dr. Pritish Tosh. “And usually that birth defect was microcepha­ly.”

The CDC report found nearly 1,000 pregnant women from 44 states who completed their pregnancie­s had some evidence of a recent Zika infection and were at risk of having a fetus or baby with Zika-related birth defects.

“The CDC report offers an important piece of informatio­n in terms of the epidemiolo­gy of Zika virus infection and what the implicatio­ns are for pregnant women.” says Tosh. “The epidemiolo­gic data from the CDC really help to quantify that what the risk is. If a pregnant woman is infected with Zika virus, there is about a 10 percent chance that the child will have some sort of birth defect, most commonly microcepha­ly. Ten percent is a very high number and it really stresses the importance that pregnant women not travel to Zika virus-endemic areas. And ... if people are traveling to areas where Zika virus is endemic ... they should wait — at least eight weeks if it’s a woman or six months if it’s a man — before trying to conceive a child. This 10 percent value seems to be very real and puts a number to what was previously an obscure concept of risk.”

Zika typically is spread through the bite of an infected Aedes genus mosquito; however, it also can be spread from mother to child and through sexual contact.

 ?? SOURCE: DREAMSTIME ?? According to a new report from the CDC, about one in 10 pregnant women with the confirmed Zika virus had a baby with birth defects.
SOURCE: DREAMSTIME According to a new report from the CDC, about one in 10 pregnant women with the confirmed Zika virus had a baby with birth defects.

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