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Study zeroes in on how Zika virus is passed from mom to foetus

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  • The placenta normally protects the foetus from viral infections
  • However, a study found that the Zika virus can get into the placenta
  • Zika can also cause a persistent infection in the placenta


New insight into how pregnant women can pass the Zika virus to their foetus could point to ways to prevent it, researchers say.

Babies infected with Zika in the womb can have abnormally small heads (microcephaly) and other birth defects.

In this study, researchers examined placenta samples collected from pregnant women during the peak of Brazil's 2015 to 2016 Zika outbreak. Samples came from five women who weren't infected and 10 who were, including five whose babies had microcephaly and five whose babies did not.

One function of the placenta is to protect the foetus from viral infections, and it's typically very effective at doing so.

Strong inflammation

But this study found that Zika can get into the placenta, increasing odds that the virus will reach the foetus.

Also, Zika can create a persistent infection in the placenta. It can trigger strong inflammation that can last for months after initial infection, and cause tissue and vascular changes that can affect foetal development.

The study was published in the journal Frontiers in Immunology.

Lead author Kíssila Rabelo, a researcher at Rio de Janeiro State University, said her team saw Zika spread rapidly in Brazil and the resulting situation for pregnant women across the country.

'Countless developments'

"It was really impactful and made us question how the scientific community could know so little about this disease," she said in a journal news release. "So as a research group that already works with arboviruses, we dedicated ourselves to understanding the pathogenesis of this disease."

Rabelo said the findings should be "useful for scientists to establish an infection profile and further understand the immune response caused by the Zika virus".

The research "could generate countless developments, from a basis for the detection of plasma biomarkers to the development of drugs and vaccines," Rabelo said, adding that these are keys to controlling future outbreaks that epidemiologists predict are likely.

Eighty-six countries have reported Zika virus, a disease that is primarily caused by a virus transmitted by mosquitoes, with large outbreaks reported in Brazil and several others.

Image credit: iStock

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