homehome Home chatchat Notifications


First case of Zika transmitted through touch in Utah was a freak occurrence, paper finds

A lot of things worked together to allow infection via casual touch alone.

Alexandru Micu
September 30, 2016 @ 1:24 am

share Share

The mysterious Utah Zika case has been solved — it probably won’t happen again, but the findings will still make you uncomfortable.

Image credits James Gathany / CDC.

In yet another worrying twist in the Zika epidemic, the Utah Department of Health reported on Monday that one case of infection in the state doesn’t fit anything we know about how the virus spreads. In July, a 73-year-old Salt Lake resident infected with Zika after a trip to Mexico died in Utah — one of his relatives, a 38-year-old man who helped care for him but did not travel to any Zika-infected areas or had intercourse with an infected person, also became infected.

Authorities were further baffled as the Aedes aegypti mosquito’s range, Zika’s primary carrier, doesn’t include Utah. A new paper published by the physicians from the University of Utah explains that this is the first documented case of the virus spreading through casual contact with an infected person.

Utah’s mystery Zika case has been solved, and the answer, as with so many revelations about Zika, is something never before seen with this virus. Someone seems to have gotten Zika through only casual physical contact with an infected person — the first such case that’s been documented.

Patient 2 says he’s come into physical contact with Patient 1 when assisting a nurse in repositioning him without using gloves, and when wiping his eyes during. He reported having no other contact with Patient 1’s blood or bodily fluids, including accidental splashes or mucous membrane exposure.

So that leaves only sweat or tears as a possible medium for infection. Previous research has found traces of Zika in infected mice’s tears, but no work has so far been performed on sweat. The team writes that Patient 2 probably had a cut somewhere on his hands or he accidentally touched his eyes, nose, or mouth with infected material on his fingers, creating an opportunity for infection.

“It should not be able to pass through unbroken skin,” says Sankar Swaminathan, the chief of infections disease at University of Utah Health Care, and first author on the paper.

The team notes that the uniqueness of Patient 1’s case allowed for the infection to occur. Zika fatalities are very rare, with only 13 adult deaths so far in the outbreak (not counting Guillain-Barré fatalities.) So for an adult patient to die of Zika there has to be a preexisting condition which compromises the immune system such as leukemia, Swaminathan says. Patient 1 didn’t have such a condition, but his infection was unusually severe. He had 200 million viral entities per milliliter — typically, that number revolves around hundreds of thousands, with one million being considered high. We don’t know exactly why, though — Zika is a pretty mild virus in adults.

The team proposes that the patient’s previous infection with dengue and the remaining antibodies somehow worsened the infection. Some dengue patients show a far worse infection with the virus. Or, the man was simply unlucky, having a genetic immune deficiency which suited the virus. “there’s some people we find who get very unusual manifestations of infections that 99.99 percent of people never get,” Swaminathan says. It could be that these people, though not otherwise immunocompromised, have specific weaknesses to particular pathogens.

“There’s some people we find who get very unusual manifestations of infections that 99.99 percent of people never get,” Swaminathan said, talking about infectious disease.

The end result was that Patient 1 struggled with an immense viral load, which eventually lead to shock, respiratory failure, and death. Swaminathan suspects that this huge concentration of viral bodies in his body allowed the virus to spread through Patient 1’s tears or sweat. The extent to which this can happen for usual Zika infections needs further research, the authors suggest.

Mosquitoes and sexual transmission are still the main worries, however.

“For the general public, this doesn’t really change very much,” Swaminathan says. “There’s no risk of shaking hands with a person who has a typical Zika infection.”

The full paper “Fatal Zika Virus Infection with Secondary Nonsexual Transmission” has been published online in the New England Journal of Medicine.

share Share

A Dutch 17-Year-Old Forgot His Native Language After Knee Surgery and Spoke Only English Even Though He Had Never Used It Outside School

He experienced foreign language syndrome for about 24 hours, and remembered every single detail of the incident even after recovery.

Your Brain Hits a Metabolic Cliff at 43. Here’s What That Means

This is when brain aging quietly kicks in.

Scientists Just Found a Hidden Battery Life Killer and the Fix Is Shockingly Simple

A simple tweak could dramatically improve the lifespan of Li-ion batteries.

Westerners cheat AI agents while Japanese treat them with respect

Japan’s robots are redefining work, care, and education — with lessons for the world.

Scientists Turn to Smelly Frogs to Fight Superbugs: How Their Slime Might Be the Key to Our Next Antibiotics

Researchers engineer synthetic antibiotics from frog slime that kill deadly bacteria without harming humans.

This Popular Zero-Calorie Sugar Substitute May Be Making You Hungrier, Not Slimmer

Zero-calorie sweeteners might confuse the brain, especially in people with obesity

Any Kind of Exercise, At Any Age, Boosts Your Brain

Even light physical activity can sharpen memory and boost mood across all ages.

A Brain Implant Just Turned a Woman’s Thoughts Into Speech in Near Real Time

This tech restores speech in real time for people who can’t talk, using only brain signals.

Using screens in bed increases insomnia risk by 59% — but social media isn’t the worst offender

Forget blue light, the real reason screens disrupt sleep may be simpler than experts thought.

Beetles Conquered Earth by Evolving a Tiny Chemical Factory

There are around 66,000 species of rove beetles and one researcher proposes it's because of one special gland.