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Patient being tested for Zika virus in Richmond; 1 case confirmed in Va.

Posted at 6:13 PM, Jan 28, 2016
and last updated 2016-01-28 18:21:19-05

RICHMOND, Va. — Officials at VCU Medical Center said Thursday a patient is being tested who may have contracted the Zika virus.

That patient recently returned from a country where the virus has been reported, but doctors are still waiting for the test results.

Additionally, the Virginia Department of Health reported someone who recently traveled abroad was infected through a mosquito bite, but did not specify which country the patient had visited.

Zika is usually not serious, but the Centers for Disease Control recently found a connection between the infection in pregnant women and birth defects.

The virus is spread by a specific species of mosquito that has not yet been seen in the United States.

Only about one in five people who get the virus will become sick, and the symptoms are generally mild.

Dr. Nirav D. Shah with the Illinois Department of Public Health said those symptoms include fever, rash, muscle and joint pain, eye pain and eye swelling as well as headaches and muscle fatigue in some cases.

Some airlines and cruise companies are granting refunds or waving change fees to people who had planned to travel to places where the virus is active.

WHO leader: Zika virus ‘spreading explosively’

The Zika virus “is now spreading explosively” around the Americas, the head of the World Health Organization said Thursday, calling the level of alarm over the disease “extremely high.”

“The level of concern is high, as is the level of uncertainty,” WHO Director-General Dr. Margaret Chan told her organization’s executive board members. “We need to get some answers, quickly.”

The mosquito-borne disease is now in “23 countries and territories in the region,” according to Chan. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said Zika is in 24 nations.

While it’s been around in some form for decades, alarms have raised only recently about Zika’s connection with “birth malformations and neurological symptoms.”

Chan explained that, where the virus has arrived, there’s been a corresponding “steep increase in the birth of babies with abnormally small heads and in cases of Guillain-Barre syndrome.” Having small heads can cause severe developmental issues and sometimes death. Guillain-Barre, meanwhile, is a rare autoimmune disorder that can lead to life-threatening paralysis.

There’s no doubt, then, that Zika virus poses a dire health threat to areas that are home to millions of people. What is far less clear is what to do about it.

Pregnant women, their babies at high risk

After being first detected in 1947 in a monkey in Uganda, Zika was most often found along the equator from Africa into Asia. Nine years ago, new cases popped up in islands in the Pacific Ocean.

Last year, it made its way to the Americas — with already devastating results.

The number of cases there has grown exponentially, prompting significant public health measures aimed at curbing it and protecting those most endangered by it, particularly women who could become pregnant or who already are. Brazil alone has reported more than 4,000 cases of microcephaly — a neurological disorder that results in babies being born with small heads — in infants born to women infected with Zika during their pregnancies.

Chan called an emergency committee meeting to convene February 1 in Geneva, Switzerland, to talk about what health officials worldwide should do about the Zika virus.

U.S.-based researchers Daniel Lucey and Lawrence Gostin had called for just such a meeting in an article published Wednesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association, criticizing the World Health Organization for not stepping up sooner.

“The very process of convening the committee would catalyze international attention, funding, and research,” Lucey and Gostin wrote. “While Brazil, PAHO, and the CDC have acted rapidly, WHO headquarters has thus far not been proactive, given potentially serious ramifications.”

After Chan’s announcement about next week’s meeting, Gostin urged Chan to “urgently mobilize international resources to curb the rapid spread of Zika worldwide, including aggressive mosquito control, active surveillance, accelerated vaccine research and travel advisories for pregnant women.

“It is far better,” said the Georgetown University public health expert, “to be overprepared than to wait until a Zika epidemic spins out of control.”

With no vaccine, controlling mosquitoes is key

The meeting in Geneva will aim to pull together research and get experts’ recommendations on the next steps. Chan said she also wants “to prioritize areas where research is most needed.”

Right now, there are no vaccines to prevent Zika virus, which not only pregnant women but their fetuses can contract. Nor are there medicines to treat those who have it.

Efforts now are focused on containing Aedes albopictus, or the Asian tiger mosquito, which spreads the disease.

That type of mosquito can be found in the United States, though as of Thursday there had been no cases of the disease being transmitted in the country. All of the Zika cases in the U.S. were contracted elsewhere in the Western Hemisphere.

And the regularly occurring global weather phenomenon known as El Niño is expected to make things worse by increasing mosquito populations, Chan said.

Still, controlling the number of mosquitoes in any specific locale is challenging. Microbiologist Brian Foy noted that Aedes mosquitoes “can replicate in flower vases and other tiny sources of water.”