Zika Virus: Here’s Everything You Need To Know
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Originally Published on catchnews | Image Courtesy: christianpost

The Zika virus, a mosquito-borne disease suspected of causing serious birth defects, it is expected to spread to all countries in the Americas except Canada and Chile, the World Health Organisation announced this week.

The virus is already present in 21 of the 55 countries and territories across the Americas, the WHO said in a statement released on 24 January.

The WHO stressed that the Aedes aegypti mosquito, which carries Zika as well as dengue and chikungunya viruses, is already present in all countries in the Americas besides Canada and Chile. Since people in the region had not been exposed to Zika before it emerged in Brazil last May they lacked immunity, allowing the virus to spread quickly.

Does India need to worry?

1. According to a report in The Indian Express, the only time any trace of the virus was recorded in India was in 1952-53.

2. Antibodies to the Zika virus study titled ‘Neutralising antibodies against certain viruses in the sera of the residents of India’, published in a journal called The Journal of Immunology, recorded among other viruses, antibodies to the Zika virus.

3. The study was conducted in 38 localities in six states in India and tested 15 vector borne viruses. As per the study significant numbers of sera neutralised the virus.

4. Dr T Mourya, director, National Institute of Virology, Pune, told IE that there have been no outbreaks in India but passive immunity has been traced in Indian samples in the past.”

There have been no reports on this virus in India since the 1952 study.

What is passive immunity and how have Indians developed it against Zika?

1. Passive immunity refers to the process of acquiring immunity against a foreign body-antigen without actual exposure to the virus. To actively acquire immunity, the body’s immune system has to be affected by the virus and fight it off.The virus has never been isolated in India so here is how the Indians might have acquired immunity against it.

2. Dengue, Zika and Chikungunya spread through a common vector, the Aedes aegypti mosquito.Dengue is however considered to be more violent and stronger relative of Zika.

3. Since people in India have been exposed to these close relatives of Zika, they may have developed antibodies against the virus.

4. According to medical experts since the proteins of all these viruses are similar, the antibodies formed are also similar.

Why is Zika causing panic?

1. The virus gets its name from the Zika forests of Uganda where it was first reported in 1947.It has so far been confined mainly to Africa, according to the WHO, with “small and sporadic outbreaks in Asia”.

2. Previous outbreaks of the virus have shown that when Zika affects adults, it causes symptoms like any other virus – fever, body ache, rashes, joint pain, reddening of eyes.

3. The Zika virus, which is transmitted by mosquitoes, cannot spread between humans. However, for pregnant women, it can be transmitted to the foetus which can – as recent cases have shown – cause microcephaly.

4. In extreme cases, it is thought to trigger Guillain-Barre syndrome – a nerve disorder that causes muscle weakness and paralysis.

5. In Brazil 4,000 babies have reportedly been born with abnormally small heads. Pregnant women are reportedly now hoarding insect repellent, refusing to leave their home and shunning dark clothes that may attract mosquitoes. Some are reportedly going to clinics to freeze their eggs until a cure is found for the virus.

6. In Colombia, where an estimated 700,000 people are at risk from infection, women have been told to wait at least six months before getting pregnant. Health officials in Brazil, Ecuador and Jamaica have given similar advice.

7. The World Health Organisation said that the explosive spread of zika virus to new geographical areas, with little population immunity, is cause for concern especially given the possible link between infection during pregnancy and babies born with small heads.

8. Chaotic urban growth, underfunded health services and the widespread use of plastic, which trap rainwater and provide breeding grounds for mosquitoes, have also been blamed for the epidemic.

Read More At catchnews

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Editor : The Logical Indian

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