| Literature DB >> 27487767 |
Phillipe Boeuf1,2, Heidi E Drummer3,4,5, Jack S Richards3,6,4, Michelle J L Scoullar3,6, James G Beeson7,8,9.
Abstract
Zika virus (ZIKV) is a mosquito-borne flavivirus that has newly emerged as a significant global threat, especially to pregnancy. Recent major outbreaks in the Pacific and in Central and South America have been associated with an increased incidence of microcephaly and other abnormalities of the central nervous system in neonates. The causal link between ZIKV infection during pregnancy and microcephaly is now strongly supported. Over 2 billion people live in regions conducive to ZIKV transmission, with ~4 million infections in the Americas predicted for 2016. Given the scale of the current pandemic and the serious and long-term consequences of infection during pregnancy, the impact of ZIKV on health services and affected communities could be enormous. This further highlights the need for a rapid global public health and research response to ZIKV to limit and prevent its impact through the development of therapeutics, vaccines, and improved diagnostics. Here we review the epidemiology of ZIKV; the threat to pregnancy; the clinical consequences and broader impact of ZIKV infections; and the virus biology underpinning new interventions, diagnostics, and insights into the mechanisms of disease.Entities:
Keywords: Biology; Economic cost; Epidemiology; Microcephaly; Pathogenesis; Placenta; Pregnancy; Public health
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27487767 PMCID: PMC4973112 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-016-0660-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Fig. 1Zika virus infection has rapidly emerged as a significant global threat. See text for further details
Fig. 2Zika virus disease pathogenesis. The figure summarizes key points regarding ZIKV transmission, clinical features and complications, and mechanisms of fetal infection and microcephaly and central nervous system abnormalities
Evidence for a causal link between ZIKV and microcephaly
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| Increase in microcephaly cases coincides with increase in ZIKV transmission (with a 6-month delay) | |
| Data modeling shows that the main period at risk is the first trimester of pregnancy | |
| Of the microcephaly cases investigated in Brazil, 32 % were linked to ZIKV | |
| Case study: Miscarriage of a baby with microcephaly was positive for ZIKV (including in its brain), but negative for other known infectious causes of microcephaly | |
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| ZIKV can infect human neural progenitor cells and attenuate their growth in vitro | |
| Primary human placental macrophages and trophoblasts are permissive to ZIKV infection in vitro | |
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| Mouse model of ZIKV display signs of microcephaly | |
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| Rubella virus, another flavivirus, causes microcephaly when infection occurs during pregnancy | |
Note: See text for further details and discussion of the evidence