Saturday, October 15, 2016

Zika May Affect Offspring Even if Infection Occurs One Week Before Birth : empr





As it stated in empr

Zika May Affect Offspring Even if Infection Occurs One Week Before Birth

Zika May Affect Offspring Even if Infection Occurs One Week Before Birth
Zika May Affect Offspring Even if Infection Occurs One Week Before Birth
Zika May Affect Offspring Even if Infection Occurs One Week Before BirthSecond study finds Zika infection can be spread through organ transplantsHealthDay News — The Zika virus may harm a infant's brain even if the mother is infected just before giving birth, according to a study published online September 6 in Clinical Infectious Diseases.The new study included 55 Brazilian women infected by Zika during pregnancy and their infants.Medical imaging revealed that four infants whose mothers were infected with Zika between two weeks and one week before birth had central nervous system lesions characteristic of viral infections.


not to mention webmd

Zika Infection May Bring Future Immunity

Zika Infection May Bring Future Immunity
Zika Infection May Bring Future Immunity
Zika Infection May Bring Future Immunity: StudyIndividuals, and large part of populations, may be protected against future epidemics, scientists sayWebMD News from HealthDayBy Robert PreidtHealthDay ReporterFRIDAY, Oct. 14, 2016 (HealthDay News) -- People who've been infected with Zika face a low risk for another bout with the virus that can cause birth defects, a new study contends."The research shows that infection provides excellent protection against reinfection," Stephen Higgs, director of the Biosecurity Research Institute at Kansas State University, said in a university news release."This means people infected during this current epidemic will likely not be susceptible again.


as well neurologyadvisor

Zika Infection in Late Pregnancy Can Still Affect Fetal Brain

Zika Infection in Late Pregnancy Can Still Affect Fetal Brain
Zika Infection in Late Pregnancy Can Still Affect Fetal Brain
Zika Infection in Late Pregnancy Can Still Affect Fetal BrainShare this content:linkedingooglePrintIn addition, a second study found that Zika infection can be spread through organ transplants.HealthDay News — The Zika virus may harm an infant's brain even if the mother is infected just before giving birth, according to a study published online Sept. 6 in Clinical Infectious Diseases.The new study included 55 Brazilian women infected by Zika during pregnancy and their infants.


Zika May Affect Offspring Even if Infection Occurs One Week Before Birth

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