Recognizing Congenital Zika Syndrome
Vanessa van der Linden, MD, a pediatric neurologist at the Association for Assistance of Disabled Children in Recife, Brazil, Dr. Pessoa, Dr. Dobyns, and colleagues on November 22, 2016, published a description of 13 infants who had evidence of congenital Zika infection but did not have microcephaly at birth. Their report was published online in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. The researchers found that head growth decelerated in all 13 of the infants by as early as age 5 months, and 11 of the infants had microcephaly. The findings suggest that infants exposed to Zika virus prenatally should receive comprehensive medical and developmental follow-up, even in the absence of microcephaly at birth, the investigators said.
That infants with prenatal Zika infection may develop postnatal microcephaly is not surprising, Dr. Dobyns said. Microcephaly, however, remains only one possible symptom of congenital Zika syndrome. “It is a pattern of features seen clinically, on CT scans, and behaviorally that will mark this syndrome,” he said.
—Jake Remaly
Suggested Reading
Moore CA, Staples JE, Dobyns WB, et al. Characterizing the pattern of anomalies in congenital Zika syndrome for pediatric clinicians. JAMA Pediatr. 2016 Nov 3 [Epub ahead of print].
van der Linden V, Pessoa A, Dobyns W, et al. Description of 13 infants born during October 2015–January 2016 with congenital Zika virus infection without microcephaly at birth — Brazil. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 22 Nov 2016 [Epub ahead of print].