An Aedes aegypti mosquito is seen on human hand
in a laboratory of the International Training and Medical Research
Training Center (CIDEIM) in Cali, Colombia January 28, 2016
REUTERS/Jaime Saldarriaga
(Copyright Reuters 2016)
Georgia health officials reported the state’s first
sexually transmitted Zika case
on Thursday. According to a news release issued by the Georgia
Department of Public Health, a non-pregnant woman whose partner traveled
to Brazil contracted the virus, which is primarily transmitted via
mosquito bites and can cause life-threatening birth defects. The woman
hadn’t traveled outside of the United States. She and her partner, who
weren’t named in the release, have since recovered from the infection.
Zika is raging in Brazil, where officials have
reported nearly 5,000 cases of microcephaly, which is marked by abnormal
head and brain development. The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) has advised pregnant women against traveling to
Zika-afflicted regions, and for men who have traveled to use condoms or
abstain from sex to prevent potential sexual transmission of the virus. A
recent report suggests Zika can remain in semen for more than 60 days.
“If your partner has traveled to an area where Zika
virus transmission is ongoing, protecting yourself by abstaining from
sex or using condoms during sex is the best way to prevent sexual
transmission of the Zika virus,” Dr. Brenda Fitzgerald, commissioner of
the Georgia Department of Public Health, said in the news release. “Next
to abstinence, condoms are the best prevention method against any
sexually transmitted infection.”
Most people who contract Zika won’t develop symptoms,
which include fever, rash, joint pain and eye redness. If a man has
traveled to a Zika-afflicted region and is looking to conceive with his
partner, experts recommend waiting to have unprotected sex for at least
eight weeks after the man returns— even if he hasn’t exhibited symptoms.
If a man does exhibit symptoms or is diagnosed with Zika, experts
recommend waiting to have unprotected sex for at least six months after
symptoms begin.
In February,
Texas health officials reported the first sexually transmitted case of Zika in the U.S. Last week,
the CDC reported that 157 pregnant women in the U.S. have been infected with Zika.
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