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All about ZIKA : Symptoms, DIagnosis and treatment

All about ZIKA virus from www.nobelsolutions.blogspot.in


Symptoms:
20 percent chances, that means 1 in 5 persons infected with Zika Virus shows symptoms (i.e. develop Zika Symptoms). Fever, Rashes, Joint pain, or conjunctivitis(red eyes) are most common symptoms of Zika. Some other signs of developing Zika are muscle pain and headache. The time from exposure to symptoms of Zika is still unknown, but is supposed to be from few days to a week.  The person suffers with mild illness with above symptoms lasting for several days to a week. Zika virus is usually found in blood and it remains in infected person for few days. Some reports show that it can stay longer in some people. Critical conditions requiring hospitalization are not common for Zika infected persons. Deaths are rare.

Diagnosis:
Symptoms of Zika virus infection are similar like Dengue and Chikungunya, and this disease spreads through same mode i.e. mosquitoes that transmit Zika. Do visit specialist physician/doctor in case you develop the symptoms as described above. If you have recently travelled to Brazil and other states where Zika Outbreak is there, visit your healthcare provider to have blood tests to look for zika or other virus spread diseases. Do it for the sake of humanity and to check further spread of virus (IN CASE BLOOD TESTS ARE POSITIVE).

Treatment :-
No vaccine or treatment are yet found by medical science worldwide to effectively prevent or treat Zika Virus infections. Still, few measures can be taken to treat the person showing Zika symptoms. 
These are:-

1. GET PLENTY OF REST.
2 DRINK FLUIDS TO PREVENT DEHYDRATION (Actually fluids are taken not for dehydration, but to flush out all those immaterial things hat has invaded in your body )
3. Acetaminophen is found to relieve fever and pain (take this medicine after proper advice from physician)
4. DO NOT TAKE ASPIRIN, IBUPROFEN, NAPROXEN  and other non-steroidal antiinflammatory drugs(NSAIDs). These drugs should be avoided until dengue can be ruled out to  reduce bleeding (haemorrhage).
5. Wear bug repellent. 

Talk to your doctor, If you are already taking other kind of medication for other medical conditions. If you are suffering from Zika, avoid mosquito bites  for initial one or two week of illness. Zika virus can be transmitted from an infected person to another  OR  mosquito through mosquito bites. These mosquitoes can further spread the virus to other persons of your family and locality.
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There's a lot of panic right now about the Zika virus — and it seems understandable.

For starters, this outbreak is different from, say, the Ebola scare that started two years ago. Ebola, after all, was extremely difficult to contract. Unless you exchanged bodily fluids with a person infected with the virus, you weren't going to get it.

Zika, by contrast, seems harder to avoid. The virus is spread by a mosquito that's common in South and Central America (as well as the southern United States and many other parts of the world). There are cases of local transmission — meaning mosquitoes are currently spreading the virus — in more than 20 countries and territories in the Americas right now, including the US territories of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.

Zika is expected to reach nearly every corner of the Western Hemisphere very soon (except for Canada and Chile). And while the virus causes no symptoms in most people, it's also been linked to terrible complications: a birth defect that causes babies' brains to stop growing, as well as Guillain-BarrĂ© syndrome, a neurological condition that leads to paralysis.

All you need to do is get bitten by an infected mosquito to put yourself at risk. And since there's no cure for Zika, the only thing you can do to protect yourself is avoid mosquitoes in places where the virus is circulating.

That said, you don't necessarily need to move to a snowy outpost in Canada (too cold for mosquitoes) or even cancel your trip to Brazil (the center of the Zika outbreak right now). It really depends on your situation. Let's go through five different options:

1) If you're pregnant...
Consider postponing your trip to Zika-affected countries. Over the past year, pediatric neurologists in Brazil began to notice that some pregnant women infected with Zika have given birth to babies with a terrible birth defect called microcephaly, which is characterized by a shrunken head and incomplete brain development.
Since Zika arrived in Brazil in the spring of 2015, more than 4,000 cases of microcephaly have been reported in newborns born to mothers with Zika virus infection — a twentyfold increase from previous years.

Researchers are still trying to figure out how many of these birth defects were really caused by the virus, and whether the link is real (i.e., whether it's Zika and not some interaction with other viruses or environmental factor causing the damage to foetuses).

But until they do, based on the precautionary principle, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is recommending pregnant women avoid travel to places with the virus. You can see this list for countries that currently have Zika travel advisories and expect that the CDC will keep adding more to the list as the virus spreads. And if you do cancel because of Zika, your airline may be offering a refund or credit, so make sure to ask about that.

2) If you're trying to get pregnant...
Proceed with caution. The CDC recommends consulting your doctor before traveling and following steps to prevent mosquito bites during the trip.

3) If you'd like to get pregnant someday (but not right now)...
No need to worry. Zika virus does not seem to pose a risk of birth defects for future pregnancies. As best researchers can tell, the virus clears itself from the body pretty quickly, remaining in the blood for only about a week after infection.

4) If you're a man with a partner who is trying to become pregnant...
It's possible that a man who travels to Brazil (say) and gets bitten by a mosquito carrying Zika could later transmit the virus through sexual intercourse. There have been two studies in the medical literature that suggest this is a risk.
In one case, a man who traveled to Senegal and contracted Zika gave it to his wife through intercourse after he returned home. In another, Zika was isolated from semen.

But there is a lot of uncertainty here. Researchers aren't sure how long Zika can remain in semen. And it's not clear how common sexual transmission actually is. Right now the evidence is pretty limited.
So consider this a potential risk. If you're a man trying to get your partner pregnant, and you travel to a Zika-infected region, you'll likely want to take precautions to avoid mosquito bites. Public Health  England also warns men to wear condoms for about a month after traveling in countries where Zika has spread, and those who had unexplained fevers or a diagnosis of Zika, to wear condoms for six months. (So far, the CDC has said the evidence is too limited to issue a warning about this risk.)

5) For everyone else...
There's (relatively) good news for everyone else. The vast majority of people who contract Zika virus will never know they had it. Only 20 percent of people who get Zika even show symptoms of the disease.

For those who do show symptoms, the most common include a mild, flu-like illness: a low-grade fever, head and body aches, red eyes, and a body rash. More rarely, people with Zika report abdominal pain, nausea, and diarrhea. These symptoms usually show up two to 12 days after a mosquito bite, and they tend to go away within a week. Severe disease requiring hospitalization is uncommon, and death is rare.

As with any virus, however, your chances of complications with the virus increase if you have underlying medical conditions.
And there's one final concern: Health authorities have already noted an increase in Guillain-BarrĂ© syndrome associated with Zika. This is a neurological condition where a person’s own immune system damages the nerve cells, leading to muscle weakness or paralysis. The symptoms can last weeks or months. Most people recover fully — though it can take years to do so. In rare cases, people have died.

Again, though, researchers are studying this link, and a direct causal relationship has not yet been established. For now it seems to be a rare but potential complication of this virus.

A final caveat

There's one asterisk that should be placed on all of the above. Zika only rarely affected humans before the massive outbreak in Brazil began in 2015. This means we're only just now learning about the virus's full effects. It's also possible that the virus has mutated in such a way that it's now more harmful and that it impacts people differently than it did in the past. Alternatively, it's possible that the risks of complications like microcephaly have been under- or overstated. We still need more research here.

So for now, just be careful. And wear lots of bug repellent.