US CDC finds Zika virus can continue growing in infant’s brain after birth
A study published recently by US researchers found evidence that the Zika virus replicates in fetal brains up to seven months after the mother has been infected, and it showed that the virus can persist even after birth.
The study findings confirm earlier observations from case studies suggesting that the mosquito-borne Zika virus can grow in fetal brains and women’s placentas.
They show that the Zika virus can continue to replicate in infants’ brains even after birth and that the virus can persist in placentas for months, much longer than the researchers expected, said Julu Bhatnagar, lead of the molecular pathology team at CDC’s Infectious Diseases Pathology Branch and the study’s lead author.
The findings help explain how the virus causes devastating birth defects and pregnancy losses even if a woman had only a minor illness. Last month, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared that Zika no longer constitutes an international emergency, but stressed the need for a long-term effort to address the virus, which has been linked to thousands of birth defects and neurological complications.
For the study, CDC researchers tested tissues from 52 patients with suspected Zika virus infection, including brain tissues from eight infants who had microcephaly and later died. They also tested placental tissues from 44 women – 22 of whom delivered apparently healthy babies and 22 whose pregnancies ended in miscarriage, abortion, stillbirth or who delivered babies with microcephaly.
Zika has been shown to cause microcephaly, a rare birth defect in which infants are born with undersized heads and brains, which can cause life-long disability.
The researchers found Zika genetic material in fetal brain tissue and placentas more than seven months after the mothers contracted the virus. In one case, they also found evidence of the virus growing in an infant with microcephaly who died two months after birth.
Of the eight infants who had microcephaly and later died, all tested positive for Zika. The mothers of all eight of these infants contracted Zika during the first trimester of pregnancy, adding to prior evidence that Zika is most dangerous early in pregnancy.
Bhatnagar said they don’t know how long the virus can persist but its persistence could have implications for babies born with microcephaly as well as for apparently healthy infants whose mothers had Zika during their pregnancies.
There are no treatments or vaccines for Zika, which previously had been seen causing only mild disease.