Zika virus, which has been linked to thousands of birth defects in Latin America, has spread rapidly and made its way to North America. Here are five things you need to know about the virus. VPC
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A new study provides the strongest evidence yet that the Zika virus is the cause of devastating birth defects seen in Brazil, home to the largest outbreak of the disease.
Authors of the new study have followed 88 pregnant women in Brazil to see whether being infected with Zika, which is spread by mosquitoes, increases the rate of birth defects. Seventy-two of the women tested positive for the virus. The women's blood and urine were tested five days or less after they developed an itchy rash, a tell-tale symptom of Zika.
Other symptoms of Zika infection included fever, pink eye, swollen lymph nodes and joint pain. Most people with Zika have no symptoms.
Ultrasounds found major abnormalities in 29% of the fetuses from women who tested positive for Zika, but none of the women without Zika infections, according to the study, published online Friday in The New England Journal of Medicine. Women were exposed to the Zika virus between the sixth and 35th week of pregnancy. A typical pregnancy lasts 40 weeks.
Those abnormalities included microcephaly, in which babies are born with unusually small skulls, which typically signifies incomplete brain development; restricted growth in the womb; poor development of brain structures; calcifications in the brain, which signal places where tissue has died; abnormal amniotic fluid levels; or abnormal blood flow in the fetal brain, umbilical cord or placenta, according to the study.
"Even if the fetus isn’t affected, the virus appears to damage the placenta, which can lead to fetal death," said study senior author Karin Nielsen,  a professor of clinical pediatrics in the division of pediatric infectious diseases at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA.
Two women with Zika infections miscarried early in pregnancy, according to the study, led by doctors at the UCLA and Fiocruz, also known as the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, a large biomedical institute in Rio de Janeiro. Two of the babies were stillborn, dying at 36 weeks and 38 weeks, according to the study.
Six women have given birth so far. Doctors plan to follow the remaining women through the end of their pregnancies and beyond, Nielsen said.
Two of the babies were born small for their gestational age. One was born with severe microcephaly and eye lesions that could indicate blindness, according to the study.
Doctors delivered one baby by emergency C-section because there was no amniotic fluid left in the uterus, a potentially life-threatening problem. The baby, a boy, recovered and appears to be healthy. His mother was infected with Zika in her 35th week of pregnancy.
Two infants of mothers with normal ultrasound results appear to be healthy, according to the study.
Ultrasound results were shown to be accurate for the two stillbirths and the six babies born alive, according to the study.
"We're seeing a spectrum of abnormalities," said Nielsen, who referred to the baby's conditions as Zika Virus Congenital Syndrome. "It's not all just microcephaly."
All of the mothers in the study were healthy, with no other risk factors for pregnancy complications.
Babies will need hearing and vision tests, Nielsen said.