Neurological Findings in Children without Congenital Microcephaly Exposed to Zika Virus in Utero: A Case Series Study

Author:

Abtibol-Bernardino Marília RosaORCID,de Almeida Peixoto Lucíola de Fátima Albuquerque,de Oliveira Geruza Alfaia,de Almeida Tatiane Freitas,Rodrigues Gabriela Ribeiro Ivo,Otani Rodrigo HaruoORCID,Soares Chaves Beatriz Caroline,de Souza Rodrigues Cristina,de Andrade Anny Beatriz Costa AntonyORCID,de Fatima Redivo Elijane,Fernandes Salete Sara,da Costa Castilho Marcia,Gomes Benzecry Silvana,Bôtto-Menezes CamilaORCID,Martinez-Espinosa Flor ErnestinaORCID,Costa Alecrim Maria das Graças

Abstract

The Zika virus can induce a disruptive sequence in the fetal brain and is manifested mainly by microcephaly. Knowledge gaps still exist as to whether the virus can cause minor disorders that are perceived later on during the first years of life in children who are exposed but are asymptomatic at birth. In this case series, we describe the outcomes related to neurodevelopment through the neurological assessment of 26 non-microcephalic children who had intrauterine exposure to Zika virus. Children were submitted for neurological examinations and Bayley Scales-III (cognition, language, and motor performance). The majority (65.4%) obtained satisfactory performance in neurodevelopment. The most impaired domain was language, with 30.7% impairment. Severe neurological disorders occurred in five children (19.2%) and these were spastic hemiparesis, epilepsy associated with congenital macrocephaly (Zika and human immunodeficiency virus), two cases of autism (one exposed to Zika and Toxoplasma gondii) and progressive sensorineural hearing loss (GJB2 mutation). We concluded that non-microcephalic children with intrauterine exposure to Zika virus, in their majority, had achieved satisfactory performance in all neurodevelopmental domains. One third of the cases had some impairment, but the predominant group had mild alterations, with low occurrence of moderate to severe disorders, similar to other studies in Brazil.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Virology,Infectious Diseases

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