With nearly 280 cases reported of Zika from 3 states, from an outbreak that began in Rajasthan, the United States has now issued a warning to pregnant women advising them to avoid visiting the state.
The Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, issued a level 2 health alert to pregnant women. Pregnant women can pass on the virus to the foetus. Cases of serious congenital defects including microcephaly have been reported in babies born to pregnant women who got the Zika virus. Babies born with microcephaly have smaller head sizes, a brain deformity that develops in the womb. There is no treatment for it.
Pregnant women who got the Zika virus in India are being monitored by state health agencies. Experts say if a concerted effort is not made to address India’s mosquito problem, these viruses are here to stay.
As per a recent research published in the journal Neurology India, scientists have found strains of the Zika virus in other parts of the country as well. The scientists at Jawaharlal Institute of Postgraduate Medical Education and Research (JIPMER) in Puducherry were analysing 90 patients and found the Zika antibodies present in 14 of them. 4 patients have also tested positive for the dengue antibodies.
These patients were suffering from Guillian-Barre Syndrome (GBS) which is a rare disease in which the body’s immune system begins to attack the nerves.
The scientists stated that there was a possibility that these patients got infected from the Zika virus which further contributed to the GBS disorder.
As per a report in the Live Mint, one of the authors of the study, Deepak Amalnath, said:
This was a chance encounter. But, what is causing Zika to spread across India, when it has been contained elsewhere in the world?
Prof Ramanan Laxminarayan, director of Centre for Disease, Dynamics, Economics and Policy, and a research scholar from Princeton University, says that the epidemiology of Zika is still unknown, so we are still not sure why has the virus surfaced in India.
The vector that carries Zika and other arboviruses, the Aedes aegypti mosquito is far more prevalent in India now than in previous decades. This mosquito is responsible for the transmission of dengue and chikungunya and is poorly controlled in urban areas in India.
The virus majorly infects pregnant women. So the impact is not just on these women but on the the babies born. A small number has the potential to impact a large population. And the fact that there is no vaccine for Zika, makes it even more difficult to contain the virus.
Add to this, the changing weather patterns in India (which in turn affect the pattern of dengue, chikungunya outbreaks) makes it a perfect habitat for the Zika virus.
We are nowhere close, says Prof Ramanan.
With no treatment available for Zika, it is critical to prevent the proliferation of the mosquito populations that are able to carry the virus. In addition to increasing surveillance and vector control efforts, the local government bodies must be pressurised to step up action in the states. A scrambled effort once the virus is identified is not good enough.
Prof Ramanan feels creating panic is not going help.
He further advises people to protect themselves against mosquito bites.
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