Unusual US Zika virus case baffles experts
- Published
Experts are trying to work out exactly how a US carer has caught Zika after tending to a dying elderly man with the virus.
Until now it was thought that only mosquitoes and sex spread Zika, as well as the risk of mother-to-child transmission in the womb.
The carer, from Utah, did not have any of these known risk factors.
US officials say they are monitoring the situation carefully and carrying out more tests.
They stress that the chance of spread from one person to another without sexual contact is still very unlikely or rare.
Zika outbreak: What you need to know
The Centres for Disease Control says the patient, who died in June, had travelled to an area where Zika-infected mosquitoes are present.
Lab tests showed he had uniquely high amounts of the virus - more than 100,000 times higher than seen in other samples from infected people - in his blood.
The CDC has sent out an emergency response team to investigate.
They will be interviewing and testing family members of the carer and any health care workers who may have had contact with the deceased man.
Gary Edwards, director of the Salt Lake County Health Department, said the infected individual was a family contact of the man who died.
"We know that the patient had contact with the deceased patient while the deceased patient was very ill," he said.
"The exact nature of that contact, we are still investigating."
The investigators also plan to trap and test local mosquitoes to check that they are not carrying and spreading the virus.
Tom Hudachko, from the Utah Department of Health, said state officials were not aware of any mosquitoes known to carry the Zika virus within Utah.
He said there had been a few Aedes aegypti mosquitoes - the kind that carry Zika - discovered in traps in the south-western parts of the state several years ago, but there had not been any since.
CDC expert Dr Erin Staples said: "The new case in Utah is a surprise, showing that we still have more to learn about Zika.
"Fortunately, the patient recovered quickly, and from what we have seen with more than 1,300 travel-associated cases of Zika in the continental United States and Hawaii, non-sexual spread from one person to another does not appear to be common."
How Zika can spread
Bites from mosquitoes that carry the virus
Maternal transmission from mother to baby in the womb
Unprotected vaginal, oral or anal sexual intercourse - although rare, the virus can persist in semen
Zika virus has been found in other bodily fluids, including saliva and urine, but it is unknown whether it can spread through these routes
Blood transfusion - very likely but not confirmed