Up until recently,
Zika was considered a benign virus. It was discovered in Uganda in 1947 and for
decades caused only small and sporadic outbreaks in far-off places like
Micronesia. At worst, people would suffer from a rash and fever with some aches
and pains. Most people never got any symptoms at all. But when the mosquito-borne virus showed up
in Brazil in 2015, everything changed. Unlike in Africa, where Zika has been
circulating for decades, the population in Brazil had never been exposed to the
mosquito-borne virus and therefore had no immunity. Brazil is also home to many
hot and densely packed cities, where the mosquito that carries that virus
thrives. These conditions helped Zika "spread explosively," as the
World Health Organization put it. The virus is now expected to reach almost
every country in the Americas (except for Canada and Chile) – and that is a
source of major worry !!
Zika virus (ZIKV)
is a member of the Flaviviridae virus family and the Flavivirus genus. In
humans, it initially causes a mild illness known as Zika fever, which since the
1950s has been known to occur within a narrow equatorial belt from Africa to
Asia. In 2014, the virus spread eastward across the Pacific Ocean to French
Polynesia, then to Easter Island and in 2015 to Central America, the Caribbean,
and South America, where the Zika outbreak has reached pandemic levels. Over
the past year, pediatric neurologists in Brazil began to notice that some
pregnant women infected with Zika have given birth to babies with a terrible
birth defect called microcephaly, which is characterized by a shrunken head and
incomplete brain development. Researchers still don’t fully understand the link
between Zika and microcephaly, but this serious birth complication is a big
part of why Zika is suddenly dominating headlines — and shaping up to be a
global public health emergency.
In Britain, experts
say mosquitoes linked to illness are coming into UK on container ships and in
the grooves of car tyres. Fears the Zika virus could strike Britain were
fuelled after an insect expert claimed mosquitos that can carry the disease have
been found there. According to experts,
there is no vaccine to prevent, or medicine to treat Zika virus. Travellers can protect themselves by taking
steps to prevent mosquito bites, such as using a mosquito net and wearing
insect repellent.
Zika symptoms are
similar to flu including fever, joint pain, rash, headache and muscle pain.
However, many people show no signs. It's only in the past few months there's
been evidence to link infection in pregnancy and birth defects, microcephaly (a
small head). The
name originated from the tropical forest near Entebbe, Uganda. Zika means
"overgrown" in the Luganda language. The forest covers an area of
about 25 hectares (62 acres) next to the swamps of Waiya Bay, an inlet of Lake
Victoria. The forest is accessible to visitors for bird watching.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
29th Jan 2016.
