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World / Americas

Zika-related microcephaly cases reach five in Colombia

Published: 22 May 2016 - 12:00 am | Last Updated: 14 Nov 2021 - 10:23 pm
Peninsula

Chou Chih-hao, deputy director of Taiwan's Centers for Disease Control (CDC), briefs reporters on Taiwan's second case of Zika virus at a news conference in Taipei, Taiwan, 21 May 2016. The patient is a 34-year-old Thai worker who was hospitalized when he flew into Taiwan from Thailand on 19 May. Test results confirmed on 21 May that he has contracted Zika virus. Taiwan reported its first case of Zika virus on 10 January when a Thai worker showed symptoms upon arriving in Taiwan.
EPA/HENRY LIN

 

Bogota: Five infants have been born with Zika-related microcephaly in Colombia since officials began monitoring the outbreak of the mosquito-borne virus, the country's health authorities said Saturday.

The first two Zika-related cases of microcephaly -- infants born with abnormally small heads and brains -- were reported in mid-April, and three more were reported Saturday in a National Institute of Health (INS) bulletin.

Health officials have said they estimate some 300 infants expected to be born between May and September will have Zika-related microcephaly, given the number of infected pregnant women who have not yet given birth.

The virus has infected nearly 84,000 people since officials began monitoring the outbreak in October. Nevertheless they said in the bulletin that the number of cases is declining.

Since October, there have been 6,400 confirmed cases of Zika infection and another 77,500 suspected cases. The total of both groups include 15,038 pregnant women.

Since December there have also been 529 cases of neurological disorder -- mainly Guillain-Barre Syndrome -- with symptoms similar to Zika, which specialists are still studying.

The health ministry said in December that the average number of infants born with microcephaly in Colombia (population 48 million) each year before the Zika outbreak was 129.

The Zika virus usually triggers only mild, flu-like symptoms. It is mainly spread by two species of Aedes mosquito, but has also been shown to transmit through sexual contact.

There is no vaccine to prevent Zika.

AFP