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| An analysis has shown 100% genetic correlation between the form of the  virus present in a man who contracted the virus in Brazil and that of a  woman who had never travelled in the epidemic area, but who had sexual  relations with him. A study by researchers from Inserm, the Paris  Public Hospitals (Bichat Hospital, AP-HP), Aix-Marseille University,  and the National Reference Centre for Arboviruses confirms that the ZIKA  virus can be transmitted sexually. Their analyses have shown 100%  genetic correlation between the form of the virus present in a man who  contracted the virus in Brazil and that of a woman who had never  travelled in the epidemic area, but who had sexual relations with him.  These results are published in The New England Journal of medicine. The ZIKA virus, a member of the Flavivirus family, is almost  exclusively transmitted to humans by Aedes mosquitoes. Although Zika  infection usually causes mild symptoms, it can be responsible for severe  neurological complications, particularly in the infant of a woman  infected while pregnant. Some indications of possible sexual  transmission of the virus have been reported before now. For the first time, and to take things further, French researchers  have been able to culture the infecting virus from two people seeking a  consultation for suspected ZIKA infection. Specimens of urine, saliva  and blood were taken from a man who returned from Brazil, and had  contracted the virus there. The same specimens were taken from a sick  woman who had sexual relations with this man, but who had never  travelled to an epidemic area. While the virus was detected in the urine and saliva of the woman,  analysis of the specimens showed that it was absent from the blood and  saliva of the man, making it unlikely that transmission occurred by  these routes. The researchers then tested his semen for the virus, and  detected high viral loads at 15 days and at 3 weeks after the patient's  return from Brazil (approximately 300 million copies/ml). The virus from both persons was individually sequenced (using a  saliva sample from the woman and a semen sample from the man) for  genetic analysis. Examination showed 100% correlation between the two  genetic sequences. Apart from 4 mutations, all of them "synonymous," the  nucleotide sequences both encoded an identical form of the virus. "Our work confirms, using molecular analyses, that sexual  transmission of the ZIKA virus exists, and should be taken into  consideration when making recommendations, due to its persistence in the  semen several weeks after infection. The period for which men should  systematically have protected sexual relations (even oral) needs to be  defined," explains Yazdan Yazdanpanah. source: sciencedaily.com   | 
Saturday, 16 April 2016
New scientific evidence of sexual transmission of the Zika virus
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