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Development of Secondary Microcephaly After Delivery: Possible Consequence of Mother-Baby Transmission of Zika Virus in Breast Milk

Authors :
Mello, Alexandra Siqueira
Pascalicchio Bertozzi, Ana Paula A.
Rodrigues, Maria Manoela D.
Gazeta, Rosa Estela
Moron, Antônio F.
Soriano-Arandes, Antoni
Sarmento, Stéphanno Gomes Pereira
Vedovello, Danila
Silva, Andrea Cristins B.
Grillo Fajardo, Thamirys C.
Witkin, Steven S.
Passos, Saulo D.
Consortium, Cohort Zika Jundiaí
Source :
The American Journal of Case Reports
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
International Scientific Literature, Inc., 2019.

Abstract

Patient: — Final Diagnosis: Diagnosis of secondary microcephaly Symptoms: 23 days after birth revealed that the baby’s head circumference remained at 33 cm (z score=−2.330) Medication: — Clinical Procedure: Analysis of samples by reverse transcriptase – polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) revealed the presence of ZIKV only in breast milk Specialty: Pediatrics and Neonatology Objective: Unusual clinical course Background: The Zika virus is an arbovirus that has as main source of transmission the bite of infected insects of the genus Aedes and has been associated with cases of congenital malformation and microcephaly in neonates. However, other sources of transmission have been identified since the emergence of this virus in the world population, such as vertical transmission by semen and possibly other body fluids such as vaginal secretion and breast milk. Case Report: An infant, born to a mother whose previous delivery was a baby with severe microcephaly, was normal and was negative for Zika virus at birth but developed secondary microcephaly 1 month later, that persisted. The baby was exclusively breast-fed and Zika virus was present in the mother’s milk. Conclusions: We report the detection of Zika virus exclusively in the breast milk of a woman after her second delivery of an infant, who later developed microcephaly. This case is consistent with possible vertical transmission.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19415923
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The American Journal of Case Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....eb8ab4b51e686b69698876c61788f519