Researchers advise long-term monitoring of infants infected with Zika after birth
A collaborative research team led by Ann Chahroudi, MD, PhD, of Emory University is recommending long-term clinical monitoring for infants infected with Zika virus early after birth. The recommendation is based on the team’s research results showing for the first time that postnatal Zika virus infection of rhesus macaque infants results in persistent abnormalities in brain structure and function as well as behavior and emotions.
Findings are scheduled for publication Wednesday April 4 in Science Translational Medicine.
Much of the concern surrounding Zika virus infection focuses on fetuses infected in utero and the potential resulting microcephaly and other anomalies. The study’s authors hypothesized that Zika virus infection during the first year of life, when the brain undergoes major growth and maturation, could also have adverse neurological consequences that may last for months and perhaps years.
Working with eight infant rhesus macaques as part of projects the Yerkes National Primate Research Center, Emory+Children’s Center for Childhood Infections and Vaccines (CCIV), and Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta funded, the researchers explored if the outcome of infection with Zika virus early after birth was similar to other viral infections in infancy, such as cytomegalovirus (CMV) and HIV. These infections can lead to significant long-term neurologic complications, which is exactly what the researchers found with Zika virus.
“The neurological, behavioral and emotional differences remained months after the virus cleared from the blood of the infants,” says Chahroudi, the study’s lead researcher. “This is why our team now recommends more than just routine monitoring for pediatric patients known to be infected with Zika.” Chahroudi is a faculty member in the Emory School of Medicine (SOM) Department of Pediatrics, an affiliate scientist in the Division of Microbiology and Immunology at Yerkes, and director of the CCIV.
The researchers used structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) brain scans at three and six months of age to evaluate the impact of Zika virus infection. “The scans were critical for confirming which brain regions were affected by the virus and/or indirectly harmed by inflammation and, importantly, the persistent brain abnormalities predicted some of the behavioral changes we observed,” says Chahroudi.
“Some of the specific findings we report are Zika virus invasion of the nervous system, enlargement of lateral ventricles, and abnormal maturation of the hippocampus and other brain regions,” adds Maud Mavigner, PhD, an instructor of Pediatrics at SOM and first author of the published paper. “These results are similar to congenital infection, but also provide new insights into changes that occur in the first year of life with early postnatal Zika virus exposure.”
Source: Read Full Article