The patient who died in Puerto Rico had a very rare complication called immune thrombocytopenic purpura. It’s caused after an infection, when the immune system cells that were attacking the virus turn on the body’s own blood platelets, destroying them. Patients can suffer bleeding and shock. In this case the patient, who had other health conditions, died.
Zika can also cause Guillain-Barre syndrome, another auto-immune reaction caused when the immune system gets mixed up after an infection. In this case it attacks the nerves and can cause sometimes severe paralysis. Usually patients recover but it kills about 1 percent of victims.
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And the birth defects are certainly deadly. When a baby has severe brain damage, it can die while still in the womb or at birth. A few women have opted for early abortions to avoid carrying a child that’s doomed. Babies have died of other, unknown causes when the mother’s been infected with Zika.
Zika can also cause other dangerous nerve conditions in adults. One is acute disseminated encephalomyelitis. It’s an inflammation of the brain and spinal cord that damages the protective fatty myelin layer that covers nerve cells.
Are there treatments?There are no specific treatments for Zika infection and there’s no known way to reverse damage done to a developing baby. A vaccine is in the works but would be years away from the market.
People with symptoms can ease the discomfort with acetaminophen. Because of the bleeding risk, doctors often advise staying away from aspirin or ibuprofen.
How far will it spread?Zika’s already spreading in more than 40 countries — all tropical countries so far, because the main carrier is the Aedes aegypti mosquito, which thrives in tropical places. But it’s expected to hit the southern U.S. in the coming months, when Aedes mosquitoes really start to breed as weather warms.
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Maggie Fox









