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Birth Defects Among Fetuses and Infants of US Women With Evidence of Possible Zika Virus Infection During Pregnancy
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Impt CDC study shows rate of microcephaly related to Zika similar among babies born in US to est rate in Brazil. https://t.co/cdSLRliPuo
— Dr. Tom Frieden (@DrFriedenCDC) December 15, 2016
jamanetwork.com - December 13, 2016 - doi:10.1001/jama.2016.19006
In this report based on preliminary data for pregnant women in the USZPR with laboratory evidence of possible Zika virus infection, 6% overall had a fetus or infant with evidence of a Zika-related birth defect, and among women with timing of possible Zika infection exclusively during the first trimester, 11% had a fetus or infant with a birth defect. The birth defects primarily involved included microcephaly with brain abnormalities, such as intracranial calcifications. Preliminary estimates from the USZPR were within the range of 1% to 13% risk of microcephaly following first-trimester maternal Zika virus infection modeled on the outbreak in Bahia, Brazil, lending support to the credibility of these estimates.
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