U.S. health officials are investigating more than a dozen possible Zika infections that may have been spread through sex.
The 14 cases all involve men who visited areas with Zika outbreaks, and who may have infected their female sex partners, who had not traveled to those areas.
Zika virus is mainly spread by mosquito bites, and sexual transmission has been considered rare. There have been two reported cases, including a recent one in Texas, and at least two other reports of the Zika virus found in semen.
Mosquito-borne Zika outbreaks have erupted across most of Latin America and the Caribbean in the last year. So far, all the 82 Zika infections diagnosed in the U.S. have involved people who traveled to outbreak regions.
On Tuesday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the 14 possible cases of sexual transmission in the U.S. include two women whose infections have been confirmed. Tests have not been completed for their male partners.
In four other cases, preliminary tests indicate women were infected but confirmatory tests are pending. Eight other cases are still being investigated, according to a CDC statement.
Several of the 14 are pregnant, but the CDC refused to be more specific.
The agency said there’s no evidence that women can spread the virus to their sex partners, but more research is needed.
In most people, Zika causes mild or no symptoms — fever, joint pain, rash and red eyes — that last about a week. But in Brazil, health officials are investigating a possible connection between the virus and babies born with brain defects and abnormally small heads.
The link hasn’t been confirmed but the possibility has prompted health officials to take cautionary steps to protect fetuses from the virus.
Research is also underway into a possible link between Zika infection and a paralyzing condition in adults called Guillain-Barre syndrome.
The CDC is advising men who have recently been to a Zika outbreak area to use a condom when they have sex with a pregnant women, or to abstain from sex during the pregnancy. It also has recommended that pregnant women postpone trips to more than 30 destinations with outbreaks. The CDC on Tuesday expanded its Zika travel advisory to two more places — the Marshall Islands, and Trinidad and Tobago.
There is no vaccine for Zika. Researchers are scrambling to develop one, as well as better diagnostic tests.
The Zika virus is mostly spread by the same kind of mosquito that transmits other tropical diseases, including dengue and chikungunya. That same mosquito is found in the Southern U.S. and officials expect they will eventually spread the virus, too. But they don’t expect to see major outbreaks.
The CDC recommends that all travelers use insect repellent while in Zika outbreak areas, and continue to use it for three weeks after travel in case they might be infected but not sick. That’s to prevent mosquitoes from biting them and possibly spreading Zika to others in the U.S.
The Associated Press contributed to this article.
The Zika virus was developed in 1947 at the direction of and with funds from the Rockefeller Foundation. Details at the following link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CE5pvrJzhKQ
Also included are details about the mosquitos that allegedly spread the virus. Since the World Health Organization wishes to declare an international emergency regarding the Zika virus, one tends to logically conclude that the WHO is controlled by the Rockefeller Foundation. If the Rockefeller doctor industry is spreading the Zika virus, its time for parents to learn how to stop it.
Parents can learn more how the neurologist, Dr. Dietrich Klinghardt, and his six-man crew of MDs, in Washington state, use MMS to remove viral pollutants and heavy metals from their patients´ bodies. It´s all on the internet. MMS is widely used in Europe, in spite of the fraudulent pharmacy hype about it being dangerous. Used in correct dosages, MMS improves health. Used in improper dosages, MMS causes illness. Meanwhile, 300,000 patients die each year in the U.S. from medications that were prescribed by licensed M.D. physicians. Thus far, no death has been unquestionably traced to MMS.
If the Idiots that keep declaring DDT as being dangerous, would do more research, they would find it is perfectly safe for humans and would control the insects spreading virus, like it did to get Malaria under control. The big drug Companies want to keep it under wraps because it’s so cheap and effective.