Thursday, December 19, 2002
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) - A month-old baby with the West Nile virus was
infected before she was born in the country's first documented
intrauterine transmission of the disease, according to a report.
The case surprised health officials who had believed the disease
could not be passed from pregnant mothers to their unborn children, the
Post-Standard of Syracuse reported Thursday.
The 20-year-old mother - a resident of this central New York city -
was admitted to a hospital on Aug. 29 with fever, headaches, blurred
vision and other symptoms that weren't attributed to the West Nile
virus. She was released a week later, but diagnosed with the virus when
she was re-admitted Sept. 24, the paper reported.
The woman gave birth at full-term in November, and tests on her
daughter's spinal fluid and umbilical cord blood showed a West Nile
infection, said Dr. Lloyd Novick, Onondaga County health commissioner.
The baby has a number of health complications, he told the paper.
The baby's life is not in danger, but the virus or its complications
may have caused problems affecting the infant's central nervous system,
according to county health officials. Officials would not release the
identity of the baby girl being treated at Crouse Hospital, or her
mother, recovering out of the hospital.
Federal officials planned to announce the case Thursday.
According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's
Web site on Wednesday, there was no evidence that West Nile virus can be
transmitted during pregnancy or birth.
The CDC has documented six cases of West Nile in pregnant women. None
of the women or children died. A case of West Nile in a Michigan infant
was attributed to breastfeeding from the mother, infected with the virus
through a blood transfusion shortly after giving birth, according to the
CDC.
``We're not recommending screening of pregnant mothers,'' said Novick,
whose department reported the Syracuse case to the CDC. ``But since this
is the first time this has happened, people have to be clinically aware
of the possibility in the future.''
Source: Internet