Vietnam confirms 1st cases of Zika virus

Vietnam confirms 1st cases of Zika virus

PanARMENIAN.Net - Two Vietnamese women have tested positive for the Zika virus, the Ministry of Health said on Tuesday, April 5 the first confirmed cases of the mosquito-transmitted infection in the Southeast Asian country, AFP reports.

State media reported the younger of the patients is pregnant.

A 64-year-old from the popular beach resort of Nha Trang became the country's first confirmed case after being admitted to hospital complaining of fever, headache and a rash on her legs, the ministry said in a statement.

The second confirmed case was a 33-year-old woman who lived in Vietnam's southern business hub Ho Chi Minh City.

VnExpress, a state media outlet, said the woman is two months pregnant.

Both patients are in a stable condition and the ministry has monitored the relatives and friends of the two women but "did not detect any other cases," of the virus, which has been linked to increased rates of microcephaly in babies born to infected mothers.

It was not immediately clear if either of the women had recently travelled abroad.

Vietnam had already raised its alert level against the virus after an Australian tourist tested positive after leaving the country on March 6, the state-run Thanh Nien newspaper said.

Zika is transmitted by the Aedes aegypti mosquito, which also spreads dengue fever, and was first discovered in Uganda in 1947.

It is not usually life-threatening but has been linked to a rise in birth defects, with hundreds of babies born with unusually small heads in countries where the virus is prevalent.

Brazil has been hardest hit by Zika, with some 1.5 million people infected and 745 confirmed cases of the brain-deforming syndrome microcephaly in children born to women infected with the virus while pregnant.

It has also spread quickly to more than 30 places in Latin America and the Caribbean since last year.

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