Colombian diagnosed with Zika virus in Joburg

A view in a macro lens of Aedes aegypti mosquito, at the epidemiology department of Guatemala city. Picture: EPA/ Esteban Biba

A view in a macro lens of Aedes aegypti mosquito, at the epidemiology department of Guatemala city. Picture: EPA/ Esteban Biba

Published Feb 19, 2016

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Johannesburg – A Colombian businessman visiting Johannesburg has been diagnosed with the Zika virus infection by a private Johannesburg pathology laboratory, Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi said on Friday.

A confirmatory test was being carried out by the National Institute for Communicable Diseases (NICD), he said.

The businessman presented with fever and a rash about four days after arrival in South Africa but was now fully recovered. The infection was acquired in Columbia prior to his visit to Johannesburg for business. Columbia was currently experiencing a large outbreak of the Zika virus.

Read:  SA health experts calm Zika virus fears

“The confirmation of this particular case poses no risk to the South African population as the virus is not transmitted from human to human but through the Aedes aegypti mosquito and/or possibly from mother to the foetus in pregnant women. However, a case of sexual transmission was recently reported in the US but is still regarded to be very rare,” Motsoaledi said.

The virus was present in the blood of a patient for a very short time, typically less than seven days, and therefore posed no danger. A person carrying the virus in the blood would have to be bitten by a correct sub-type of an Aedes aegypti mosquito within this period for the virus to be transmitted to the next person through a bite by the same mosquito.

The Aedes mosquito that transmits the Zika virus in South America also transmits dengue fever and yellow fever, but these viruses were not found in South Africa, indicating that the local Aedes mosquito did not contribute to the spread of the Zika virus.

Read: Plan in place to prevent Zika virus in SA

Given the frequency of travel between South Africa and a number of countries currently experiencing outbreaks of the Zika virus, it was likely that other sporadic imported cases would be seen in South Africa in travellers, as had been the experience in a number of countries, Motsoaledi said.

African News Agency

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