You are here
Microcephaly Found in Babies of Zika-Infected Mothers Months After Birth
Primary tabs
Microcephaly Found in Babies of Zika-Infected Mothers Months After Birth
Fri, 2016-11-25 09:53 — Kathy Gilbeaux
A 1-year-old child, one of the patients in a new study, showed clear signs of microcephaly, but also had good eye contact. Credit van der Linden V, Pessoa A, et al. MMWR: 11.22.2016
nytimes.com - by Pam Belluck - November 22, 2016
It is the news that doctors and families in the heart of Zika territory had feared: Some babies not born with the unusually small heads that are the most severe hallmark of brain damage as a result of the virus have developed the condition, called microcephaly, as they have grown older.
The findings were reported in a study of 13 babies in Brazil that was published Tuesday in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. At birth, none of the babies had heads small enough to receive a diagnosis of microcephaly, but months later, 11 of them did . . .
. . . The new study echoes another published this fall, in which three babies were found to have microcephaly later in their first year.
ALSO SEE RELATED INFORMATION HERE - What Doctors Learned From 42 Infants With Microcephaly
Recent Comments