Dr Anne Schuchat, CDC Deputy Principal Director (Image source: BBC) |
A rare case of the Zika
virus being transmitted through sex, not a mosquito bite, has been reported in
the US.
A
patient infected in Dallas, Texas, is likely to have been infected by sexual
contact, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) told the BBC.
The
person had not travelled to infected areas but their partner had returned from
Venezuela.
Zika
is carried by mosquitoes and has been linked to thousands of babies being born
with underdeveloped brains.
It
is spreading through the Americas and the World Health Organization has
declared the virus a global public health emergency.
In
another development, two cases of the Zika virus have been confirmed in
Australia. Officials said the two Sydney residents had recently returned from
the Caribbean.
Meanwhile,
Brazil - the country worst hit by the outbreak - has revealed it is
investigating 3,670 suspected cases of microcephaly in babies linked to the Zika
virus.
A
total of 404 cases have so far been confirmed - up from 270 last week - while
709 cases have been discarded, the country's health ministry said.
Analysis
If
Zika can readily spread through sex, then it poses a risk to every country not
just those with the Aedes mosquito.
So
far, authorities have said sexual transmission is rare, but last year they
would have said any case of Zika was rare, too.
This
explosive outbreak has caught the world by surprise and many key questions
remain unanswered.
Exactly
how common or rare is sexual transmission? Can it be spread by the 80% of
people who show no symptoms? How long does the virus persist in semen? When is
it safe to have sex again?
What
should men do after visiting affected countries? Can women also spread the
virus through sex?
However,
this is not a new HIV/Aids moment. HIV infection is incurable and dramatically
shortens lives without daily medication.
Zika
infections are short, mild and pose a significant threat only in pregnancy.
The
ministry also said 76 infant deaths from microcephaly, either during pregnancy
or just after birth, were suspected.
The
case in Dallas would be the first known infection to take place in the mainland
US, though Texas has seen seven other Zika cases all related to foreign travel.
Anne
Schuchat, principal deputy director for CDC, said this was the first case it
had dealt with involving a "non-traveller".
"We
don't believe this was spread through mosquito bites, but we do believe it was
spread through a sexual contact."
A
statement issued by the CDC said the best way to avoid Zika virus infection was
"to prevent mosquito bites AND to avoid exposure to semen from someone who
has been exposed to Zika".
The
case is "significant" if it was definitely transmitted through sexual
contact, Alaka Basu, a senior fellow for public health at the UN Foundation,
told the BBC.
"This
significance is parallel with the HIV/Aids case. It's worse in some ways,
because there are two modes of transmission."
It
is not the first known case of sexual transmission. There was a case in 2013 in
French Polynesia, according to the CDC website.
The
CDC recommends that pregnant women avoid travel to more than two dozen
countries with Zika outbreaks, mostly in the Caribbean and Latin America,
including Venezuela.
Brazilian
President Dilma Rousseff said her government was focused on eradicating the
mosquito that transmits the virus.
In
an address to a joint session of Congress, she said considerable funds would be
set aside for the programme.
"We
should all be worried about microcephaly," she said.
The
alert issued by the World Health Organization (WHO) on Monday puts Zika in the
same category of concern as Ebola.
It
means research and aid will be fast-tracked to tackle the infection.
WHO
director general, Margaret Chan called Zika an "extraordinary event"
that needed a coordinated response.
She
said the priorities were to protect pregnant women and their babies from harm
and to control the mosquitoes that are spreading the virus.
WHO has said it could take
up to nine months for experts to prove or disprove any connection between the
virus and babies born with microcephaly.
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