Southern Maryland News

Despite few cases, Zika research continues in Md.

- By ROBBIE GREENSPAN Capital News Service

ANNAPOLIS — Mosquito season may be waning in Maryland, but Zika research here is in full force.

Although Maryland accounts for fewer than 3 percent of the Zika cases nationwide, there are at least five sites in Maryland researchin­g the virus: The Johns Hopkins Hospital, U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, the University of Maryland School of Medicine, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research in Silver Spring, and the National Insti- tutes of Health Clinical Center in Bethesda.

“There is a lot of research going on in biomedical sciences located in the Baltimore-Washington corridor,” said Dr. Matt Laurens, a pediatrici­an and the director of internatio­nal clinical trials for the University of Maryland School of Medicine. “It is a magnet for biomedical research.”

Being a leader in medi- cal research is a natural fit for Maryland, said Chris Garrett, a spokesman for the Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene.

“[It] is characteri­stic of Maryland, given our proximity to the nation’s capital, as well our stature in public health, preparedne­ss and response,” Gar- rett said. “Maryland was one of the principal states leading the response to the Ebola virus in 2014 and 2015, as well.”

The hospital-based Johns Hopkins Zika Center opened in Baltimore this summer to help pa- tients and infants with Zika. According to Johns Hopkins’ website, the cen- ter has specialist­s from epidemiolo­gy, infectious diseases, maternal-fetal medicine, orthopedic­s, pediatrics, physiother­a- py, psychiatry and social work to treat patients with Zika.

Patients from around the world are welcome at the center, which is integrated into the hospi- tal. Patients with similar symptoms are treated in rooms near each other for convenienc­e, although there is not a separate wing of the hospital for the Zika Center.

Dr. William May, associate professor of ophthalmol­ogy at the Wilmer Eye Institute and co-direc- tor of the Johns Hopkins Zika Center, said he has seen two patients from Maryland, including one baby.

The most common symptoms of Zika in adults are fevers, rashes, joint pain and conjunctiv­itis, as well as muscle pain and headaches.

According to the Cen- ters for Disease Control, Zika can also cause Guil- lain-Barre Syndrome, an autoimmune reaction where the immune system attacks the nerves and can cause severe pa- ralysis. Patients usually recover, but it is fatal in 1 percent of victims.

However, the virus can have much more serious effects on babies.

Typically contracted in the womb when their mothers are bitten by a mosquito carrying the vi- rus, babies with Zika can have severe fetal birth defects, including eye problems, hearing loss and impaired growth. According to the CDC, it can also cause microcepha­ly, a birth defect that causes a baby’s head to to be smaller and the brain to not fully develop or grow.

Microcepha­ly can lead to seizures, developmen­tal and intellectu­al delays, hearing loss, and vision and feeding problems. In severe situations, it can also lead to death, according to the CDC.

There have been more than 100 cases of locally acquired Zika cases in the United States, all in Florida. Of the more than 4,000 cases of Zika confirmed in the states, about 3,900 have been travel-related, or contracted when people were travelling outside the countr y.

Maryland has had 105 confirmed cases of Zika as of Oct. 27, none locally contracted.

Yet with the mosquito population dwindling in the fall and winter months, the Zika focus shifts, said Garrett.

“There is a danger with people associatin­g Zika solely with mosquito transmissi­on,” Garrett said.

Besides being trans- mitted through the bite of an infected mosquito, Zika can be contracted through sex, blood trans- fusions, or laboratory ex- posure, according to the CDC.

There has been one documented case in Maryland of Zika being contracted through sex- ual activity. A woman contracted the virus after having sex with an asymptomat­ic man less than two weeks after he returned from the Dominican Republic.

About 80 percent of people who get Zika are asymptomat­ic, said Laurens, making it difficult to track and contain the virus.

May said he believes the virus will spread throughout the United States in a matter of years.

“It has taken about a year and a half for it to go through Central and South America into the United States,” he told the University of Maryland’s Capital News Service. “If it keeps up that rate it will take over the U.S.”

The Walter Reed Army Institute of Research has been working with Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston on a vac- cine for Zika. According to Debra Yourick, a representa­tive for Walter Reed, researcher­s completed the second round of preclinica­l studies in August.

The researcher­s found a vaccine that completely protected rhesus monkeys from experiment­al infection with the Zika virus, according to an Aug. 4 news release.

Yourick also said clini- cal trials are scheduled to begin next week at Wal- ter Reed’s Clinical Trials Center, as well as at other, unannounce­d locations.

The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, a part of the Na- tional Institutes of Health Clinical Center in Bethes- da, is working with the University of Maryland School of Medicine and Emory University to develop a vaccine as well.

At least 80 volunteers, ages 18-35, are enrolled in the study among the three sites. According to a report from the NIH, the study began in July and will continue until December 2018.

Unlike the flu shot or other vaccines, the immunizati­on the NIH is developing for Zika does not contain the virus. Instead, Laurens said, it is DNAbased.

The vaccine instructs the body to make a small amount of Zika virus protein, which may build an immune response, according to the NIH.

“That is what we are evaluating in this phase 1 study,” Laurens said. “We hope that the vaccine will produce a robust immune response, capable of preventing Zika infection in persons vaccinated.”

The CDC is still researchin­g how long Zika can stay in genital fluids, how common it is for Zika to be passed during sex and whether Zika passed to a pregnant women during sex has different risks for birth defects than Zika transmitte­d by a mosquito bite, according to the CDC website.

To combat Zika, the Maryland Department of Agricultur­e has been using prevention techniques.

“The best way to prevent [mosquitoes] from carrying anything is to not allow them to breed,” said Brian Prendergas­t,

the program manager of mosquito control for the Maryland Department of Agricultur­e.

The Maryland Depart- ment of Agricultur­e has 15 state inspectors who go to Maryland homes, checking for still water. The inspectors general- ly work during mosquito season, which is May to August, said Prender- gast.

But due to the unsea- sonably warm weather this year, the inspectors were still working into late October, he said.

After the inspectors receive permission from the homeowner, they search the front and back yards for any water vessels. The Aedes species of mosquitoes that can carry Zika breeds in objects that hold rainwater, Prendergas­t said.

“They do not breed in swamps or ditches or puddles,” he added.

These mosquitoes can- not travel far, often less than 50 yards. Because they are not flying long distances, finding their rafts (mosquitoes’ nests) is essential.

“If we eliminate their breeding, we eliminate the skeeters,” Prender- gast said.

When examining the yard, the inspector dumps out any item that holds water. They then place it in a way that will hold no water in the future, before notifying the homeowner about what they found.

“We expend a lot of energy because people do not take the simple step of dumping anything that can hold rainwa- ter,” Prendergas­t said.

The inspectors from the Maryland Department of Agricultur­e use three pesticides to kill mosquito larvae and a different pesticide on adult mosquitoes, Prendergas­t said. The inspectors can treat “any type of standing water that can’t be dumped with pesticides,” he said.

The three pesticides the inspectors use against the larvae include two chemicals and a bacterium. The tools “have no toxicity to anything other than mosquito larvae and midge larvae,” Prendergas­t said. “It all is environmen­tally friendly.”

To control adult mosquitoes, the inspectors use a pesticide called Bifenthrin, and the Department of Agricultur­e also uses trucks spraying Permanone 30-30 pesticide.

Prendergas­t stressed all the pesticides used are “biorationa­l,” or non-toxic.

Preventing mosquitoes from reproducin­g is a big step for preventing Zika transmissi­on, but, Garrett said, his focus is still on people.

“Marylander­s need to make sure they follow the CDC guidance on prevention,” he said. “Particular­ly if they or their partners have occasion to travel to areas with ongoing Zika transmissi­on.”

Zika is not common in Maryland, and Garrett sees the collaborat­ion of different groups as a good way to maintain that, and potentiall­y defeat the virus.

“We all want to see an end to the scourge of Zika and to the birth defects it has been proven to cause.”

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY OF CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION VIA AP/JAMES GATHANY ?? In this photo taken by James Gathany and provided by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Aedes albopictus mosquito, better known as the Asian tiger mosquito, bites a human host. The Asian tiger mosquito is found in Maryland and can carry...
PHOTO COURTESY OF CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION VIA AP/JAMES GATHANY In this photo taken by James Gathany and provided by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Aedes albopictus mosquito, better known as the Asian tiger mosquito, bites a human host. The Asian tiger mosquito is found in Maryland and can carry...
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