A virus that brought about a big outbreak in Brazil this yr can unfold from a pregnant girl to the fetus. The affirmation of a number of circumstances of transmission to the womb signifies that the virus, known as Oropouche, has a characteristic in frequent with two different insect-borne viruses, Zika and dengue.
A 40-year-old girl’s stillbirth this summer time in Brazil was linked to transmission of the virus from the lady to the fetus, researchers report October 30 within the New England Journal of Medication. (The World Well being Group defines a stillbirth because the loss of life of a fetus after 28 weeks of being pregnant.) The Brazilian Ministry of Well being has additionally confirmed two different deaths because of the unfold of Oropouche virus to the womb: a stillbirth to a 28-year-old girl and a child born with congenital anomalies who died after 47 days. There are different potential circumstances of transmission to the womb being investigated.
As of mid-October, Brazil has reported greater than 8,000 circumstances of Oropouche fever because the starting of the yr. It’s the most important outbreak within the Americas this yr; among the different international locations with circumstances embrace Peru, with greater than 900, and Cuba, with greater than 500. Infections may cause fever, chills, joint ache and extreme complications, amongst different signs. The virus is unfold primarily by the chew of Culicoides paraensis midges, that are very small flies, and typically by mosquitoes. As with Zika, there aren’t any medicines to deal with Oropouche fever or vaccines that focus on the virus.
It’s additionally attainable that Oropouche virus might be unfold by means of sexual transmission. A person recognized with Oropouche fever this summer time nonetheless had useful virus in his semen 16 days after his signs began, a unique group of researchers report within the December Rising Infectious Illnesses. If the power to transmit sexually proves true, it will be one other characteristic in frequent with Zika, which brought about a large outbreak of infections within the Western Hemisphere in 2015 and 2016 (SN: 12/13/17).
Brazil’s giant outbreak, the affirmation that the virus can unfold to the womb and hurt the fetus and the sudden deaths of two girls of their twenties who developed Oropouche fever have introduced extra consideration to the not-well-understood virus.Â