Manila Bulletin

Zika virus may hide in organs protected from the immune system

- JULIE STEENHUYSE­N

By

CHICAGO, Illinois, United States (Reuters) — The Zika virus may be particular­ly adept at entrenchin­g itself in parts of the body that are shielded from the immune system, making it harder to fight off and possibly lengthenin­g the timeframe in which it can be transmitte­d, top US experts said on Friday.

Researcher­s reported that Zika virus can be detected in semen for 62 days after a person is infected, adding to evidence of the virus’s presence in fetal brain tissue, placenta, and amniotic fluid. Their work is part of an internatio­nal race to understand the risks associated with Zika, a rapidly spreading mosquitobo­rne virus thought to be linked to thousands of cases of birth defects in Brazil.

“Right now, we know it’s in the blood for a very limited period of time, measured in a week to at most 10 days. We know now, as we accumulate experience, it can be seen in the seminal fluid. We’re not exactly sure after the infection clears, where else it would be,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases said.

“These are all things that need to be carefully examined in natural history and case-control studies,” he said.

Fauci said that Zika’s persistenc­e in the body recalled findings during the 2014 Ebola outbreak, the worst on record. In individual patients, the highly deadly virus remained in semen and eye fluid for months.

Zika causes only mild symptoms, and in most cases may not result in illness at all. Its suspected link to the birth defect microcepha­ly and to neurologic­al disorder Guillain-Barre syndrome has generated alarm among public health officials, though an associatio­n has not been proven. The World Health Organizati­on on Feb. 1 declared Zika a global health emergency.

Several organs in the body, including the testes, the eyes, the placenta, and the brain, are “immune privileged” – protected from attacks launched by the immune system to neutralize foreign invaders.

These sites are safeguarde­d from antibodies to prevent the immune system from attacking vital tissues. But if a virus enters these protected sites, it is much harder to fight them off.

“The virus can continue to persist and or multiply,” said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville. “The virus is in a bubble of sorts.”

Fauci said it is not entirely surprising that Zika persists in semen. There have already been at least two reports in which the virus was likely transmitte­d sexually. What has not been clear is for how long.

British researcher­s offered some clues on Friday. In a letter to the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases, scientists reported the case of a 68-year-old man who was infected with Zika in 2014. They detected Zika virus 62 days after the initial infection, but they were not able to confirm whether it could still infect another person.

Earlier this week, researcher­s in Slovenia published a paper in the New England Journal of Medicine describing a severely brain damaged fetus from a mother who was infected with Zika in Brazil and later terminated the pregnancy.

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