Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
Health

First Evidence That Zika May Cause Temporary Paralysis

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Mar, 2016 11:31 AM
    LONDON — Scientists may have the first evidence that Zika can cause temporary paralysis, according to a new study of patients who developed the rare condition during an outbreak of the virus in Tahiti two years ago.
     
    Zika is currently spreading with alarming speed across the Americas. The World Health Organization declared the epidemic to be a global emergency several weeks ago based on suspicions it may be behind a surge in disturbing birth defects and in Guillain-Barre syndrome, a neurological illness that mostly lasts a few weeks.
     
    Before reaching South America last year, the mosquito-spread Zika had triggered outbreaks in the South Pacific on Yap island in Micronesia and in French Polynesia, including its largest island, Tahiti.
     
    Researchers in Tahiti, France and elsewhere went back and analyzed blood samples from all 42 adults diagnosed with Guillain-Barre syndrome from the 2013-14 outbreak; nearly everyone showed signs of a previous Zika infection.
     
    They were compared with patients who did not have the condition and did not have any Zika symptoms but were treated at the same hospital for other illnesses. Tests showed only half of that group of 98 had apparently been infected with the normally mild virus.
     
    The research was published online Monday in the journal Lancet.
     
    "The evidence that links Zika virus with Guillain-Barre syndrome is now substantially more compelling," said Peter Barlow, an infectious diseases expert at Edinburgh Napier University who was not part of the study. But he noted in a statement that more research was needed before reaching the same conclusion about the outbreak in the Americas, where local factors may be playing a role.
     
     
    Zika is mostly spread by mosquito bites and in most people causes symptoms including fever, muscle pain and a rash. About 80 per cent of people who catch the disease don't report any illness.
     
    Guillain-Barre syndrome is typically seen after a viral or bacterial infection so a possible connection to Zika isn't entirely unexpected. It occurs when the body's immune system attacks the nervous system, often for unknown reasons. It can cause muscle weakness and breathing problems; about 5 per cent of patients die from the disorder. Of the patients observed in Tahiti, none died and three months after leaving the hospital, about 40 per cent could walk unaided.
     
    The study also considered whether Guillain-Barre was the result of people being infected with both Zika and a related tropical disease, dengue, by comparing them with people who had Zika but no neurological symptoms. It found no hint that having dengue upped the risk.
     
    Based on their findings, the scientists estimated that of 100,000 people with Zika, about 24 would develop Guillain-Barre syndrome. In Europe and North America, the average rate of the syndrome after infections like flu and dengue is about one to two people per 100,000.
     
    David Smith of Australia's Curtin University said it was difficult to know exactly how often Zika causes Guillain-Barre syndrome. Smith co-authored an accompanying commentary in the Lancet.
     
    He said in an email that because the Zika virus disappears from the body by the time patients develop neurological complications, there was only indirect evidence — via infection-fighting antibodies — that Zika caused Guillain-Barre syndrome. Zika is thought to be gone from the bloodstream after a week or so. Smith said not all of the Guillain-Barre cases in Tahiti could be blamed on Zika and that the researchers' estimate of the syndrome's incidence was probably inflated.
     
    Still, experts predicted cases of Guillain-Barre syndrome would jump as Zika explodes in the Americas and WHO has warned the disease is likely to spread everywhere in the region except for Canada and Chile.
     
    The study doesn't shed any light on whether Zika is also responsible for the spike in the number of babies born in Brazil with abnormally small heads, or microcephaly.
     
    "That remains a mystery but our suspicions are very strong," said Jimmy Whitworth, a professor of infectious diseases at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
     
    "Both Guillain-Barre syndrome and microcephaly are neurological conditions, but I don't think it would be the same mechanism that's causing both," he said. "There may be something slightly different happening with microcephaly."
     
    Since the Zika outbreak in the Americas began last year, it has sparked epidemics in about 40 countries, of which eight have reported cases of Guillain-Barre syndrome possibly connected to Zika.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    CDC Expands Tropical Virus Alert; 22 Destinations On List

    CDC Expands Tropical Virus Alert; 22 Destinations On List
    Health authorities have added eight tropical destinations to a travel alert about an illness linked with a severe birth defect and spread by mosquitoes.

    CDC Expands Tropical Virus Alert; 22 Destinations On List

    Exercise Counters Brain Shrinkage In Parkinson's Disease

    Exercise Counters Brain Shrinkage In Parkinson's Disease
    By protecting the brain from shrinkage, aerobic exercise may slow the progression of Parkinsons disease, a progressive disorder of the nervous system, says a neurologist.

    Exercise Counters Brain Shrinkage In Parkinson's Disease

    CDC: Ask Pregnant Women About Trips To Zika Outbreak Areas

    CDC: Ask Pregnant Women About Trips To Zika Outbreak Areas
    NEW YORK — U.S. health officials issued new guidance Tuesday for doctors whose pregnant patients may have travelled to regions with a tropical illness linked to birth defects.

    CDC: Ask Pregnant Women About Trips To Zika Outbreak Areas

    To Eat Less, Serve Food In Small Portions On Large Tables

    To Eat Less, Serve Food In Small Portions On Large Tables
    According to a new study, the size of a table has a significant impact on how people perceive the food that is placed upon it and consequently how much people eat it.

    To Eat Less, Serve Food In Small Portions On Large Tables

    Study Questions Link Between Teen Pot Smoking And IQ Decline

    NEW YORK — A new analysis is challenging the idea that smoking marijuana during adolescence can lead to declines in intelligence.

    Study Questions Link Between Teen Pot Smoking And IQ Decline

    Highrise Residents Who Have Cardiac Arrest Have Lower Survival Rates: Study

    Highrise Residents Who Have Cardiac Arrest Have Lower Survival Rates: Study
    Residents on higher floors who have a cardiac arrest have a far lower survival rate than those on lower floors, likely because it takes longer for paramedics to reach the patient and begin resuscitation efforts.

    Highrise Residents Who Have Cardiac Arrest Have Lower Survival Rates: Study