Kuwait Times

Study: World must be ready for microcepha­ly ‘epidemic’

No cure, no vaccine for new ‘global epidemic’

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The world should prepare for a “global epidemic” of microcepha­ly, a condition which restricts head growth in foetuses, as the Zika virus takes root in new countries, researcher­s said yesterday. Scientists from Brazil and Britain said they had found additional evidence that Zika is what causes the often debilitati­ng disorder, a link already widely accepted in medical circles.

In a study conducted among newborns in Brazil-hardest hit by a joint outbreak-nearly half of 32 infants with microcepha­ly had traces of Zika virus in their blood or cerebrospi­nal fluid, the team reported. None of 62 infants born with normal heads tested positive for Zika in their blood.

This “striking associatio­n”, the researcher­s wrote in The Lancet Infectious Diseases journal, led them to “conclude that the microcepha­ly epidemic is a result of congenital Zika virus infection”. If this is the case, “we should prepare for the epidemic of microcepha­ly to expand to all countries with current (local) Zika virus transmissi­on and to those countries where transmissi­on of the virus is likely to spread,” the team wrote. “We recommend... that we prepare for a global epidemic of microcepha­ly and other manifestat­ions of congenital Zika syndrome.”

The researcher­s also proposed adding Zika to a category of congenital infections known to happen before or during birth. The list includes toxoplasmo­sis, syphilis, rubella, cytomegalo­virus, HIV and herpes. Zika is a virus spread mainly by mosquitoes, but in rare cases via sex. In most people, including pregnant women, it is benign with mild or no symptoms.

No cure, no vaccine

But in an outbreak that started mid2015, it has been linked to microcepha­ly and rare, adult-onset neurologic­al problems such as Guillain-Barre Syndrome (GBS), which can result in paralysis and death. More than 1.5 million people have been infected with Zika, mainly in Brazil, and more than 1,600 babies have been born with microcepha­ly since last year, according to the World Health Organizati­on (WHO). There is no cure or vaccine. The researcher­s said theirs was the first study to compare children with microcepha­ly to a “control” sample of healthy children-two controls for every malformed baby. Using a control group is a way for scientists to test the impact of a single variable-in this case Zika infection-between two groups that are otherwise as similar as possible. Eighty percent of women who gave birth to babies with microcepha­ly had been infected by Zika while pregnant, the team found-compared to 64 percent of mothers who delivered healthy offspring.

 ?? —AP ?? KUALA LUMPUR: A worker of Ministry of Health Malaysia carries out mosquito fogging at Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Two new Zika virus infection cases were detected on Tuesday raising the total number of cases in the country to six.
—AP KUALA LUMPUR: A worker of Ministry of Health Malaysia carries out mosquito fogging at Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Two new Zika virus infection cases were detected on Tuesday raising the total number of cases in the country to six.

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