Newswise Focus Channel: WK Health Zika Feature 2 /articles/channels/WK Health Zika Feature 2 This [feature]/[breaking news]/[focus] channel highlights experts, research, and feature stories related to... en-us Copyright 2024 Newswise Newswise Focus Channel: WK Health Zika Feature 2 115 31 / /images/newswise-logo-rss.gif National Geographic's THE HOT ZONE shows biosecurity's importance /articles/national-geographic-s-the-hot-zone-shows-biosecurity-s-importance/?sc=c6444 /articles/national-geographic-s-the-hot-zone-shows-biosecurity-s-importance/?sc=c6444 Thu, 23 May 2019 13:05:41 EST Infectious Diseases,Influenza,Zika Virus Science News Feature Expert Ron Trewyn, Kansas State University NBAF liaison, writes to encourage people to watch THE HOT ZONE, a National Geographic limited series inspired by two Kansas State University veterinarians and leaders and their work during the 1989 Ebola-related outbreak in Virginia. Kansas State University Repurposed Drug Found to Be Effective Against Zika Virus /articles/repurposed-drug-found-to-be-effective-against-zika-virus/?sc=c6444 /articles/repurposed-drug-found-to-be-effective-against-zika-virus/?sc=c6444 Thu, 25 Jan 2018 11:05:33 EST All Journal News,Infectious Diseases,Public Health,Women's Health,Zika Virus,Pharmaceuticals,Scientific Reports,California Medical News Research Results <img src="/legacy/image.php?image=/images/uploads/2018/01/25/zika_niaid.jpg&width=100&height=150" alt="Newswise image" />In both cell cultures and mouse models, a drug used to treat Hepatitis C effectively protected and rescued neural cells infected by the Zika virus -- and blocked transmission of the virus to mouse fetuses. Researchers at University of California San Diego School of Medicine, with colleagues in Brazil and elsewhere, say their findings support further investigation of using the repurposed drug as a potential treatment for Zika-infected adults, including pregnant women. /articles//images/uploads/2018/01/25/zika_niaid.jpg UC San Diego Health Zika Vaccine Induces Robust Immune Responses in Three Phase 1 Trials /articles/zika-vaccine-induces-robust-immune-responses-in-three-phase-1-trials/?sc=c6444 /articles/zika-vaccine-induces-robust-immune-responses-in-three-phase-1-trials/?sc=c6444 Mon, 04 Dec 2017 18:30:00 EST Infectious Diseases,Public Health,Vaccines,Zika Virus,All Journal News Medical News Research Results <img src="/legacy/image.php?image=/images/uploads/2017/12/4/Barouch.jpg&width=100&height=150" alt="Newswise image" />Healthy adults mounted strong immune responses after receiving an investigational whole inactivated Zika virus vaccine, according to interim analyses of three Phase 1, placebo-controlled, double-blind trials conducted at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC), Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (WRAIR), and Saint Louis University School of Medicine. The findings were published today in The Lancet. /articles//images/uploads/2017/12/4/Barouch.jpg Beth Israel Lahey Health Study Raises Possibility of Naturally Acquired Immunity Against Zika Virus /articles/study-raises-possibility-of-naturally-acquired-immunity-against-zika-virus/?sc=c6444 /articles/study-raises-possibility-of-naturally-acquired-immunity-against-zika-virus/?sc=c6444 Thu, 16 Nov 2017 14:00:00 EST All Journal News,Immunology,Zika Virus,PLOS Medical News Research Results <img src="/legacy/image.php?image=/images/uploads/2017/11/15/Way_PLOSpath_Zikaplaque.jpg&width=100&height=150" alt="Newswise image" />Birth defects in babies born infected with Zika virus remain a major health concern. Now, scientists suggest the possibility that some women in high-risk Zika regions may already be protected and not know it. New research in PLOS Pathogens on Nov. 16, performed in mice, shows women who develop symptom-free Zika infections may be able to acquire immunity that would protect them from future infections and their offspring in a future pregnancy. /articles//images/uploads/2017/11/15/Way_PLOSpath_Zikaplaque.jpg Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center Antibody Protects Against Zika and Dengue, Mouse Study Shows /articles/antibody-protects-against-zika-and-dengue-mouse-study-shows/?sc=c6444 /articles/antibody-protects-against-zika-and-dengue-mouse-study-shows/?sc=c6444 Mon, 25 Sep 2017 11:00:00 EST All Journal News,Immunology,Infectious Diseases,Influenza,Zika Virus,Nature (journal),Grant Funded News Medical News Research Results <img src="/legacy/image.php?image=/images/uploads/2017/09/22/diamond.jpg&width=100&height=150" alt="Newswise image" />The same countries hard hit by Zika virus - which can cause brain damage in babies infected before birth - are also home to dengue virus. Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis researchers report that they have found an antibody that protects against both viruses. These findings, in mice, could be a step towards an antibody-based preventative drug to protect fetuses from brain damage, while also protecting their mothers from both Zika and dengue disease. /articles//images/uploads/2017/09/22/diamond.jpg Washington University in St. Louis Test Uses Nanotechnology to Quickly Diagnose Zika Virus /articles/test-uses-nanotechnology-to-quickly-diagnose-zika-virus/?sc=c6444 /articles/test-uses-nanotechnology-to-quickly-diagnose-zika-virus/?sc=c6444 Thu, 10 Aug 2017 15:30:01 EST Infectious Diseases,Nanotechnology,Public Health,Zika Virus,All Journal News Medical News Research Results <img src="/legacy/image.php?image=/images/uploads/2017/08/10/Zikaone.jpg&width=100&height=150" alt="Newswise image" />Currently, testing for Zika requires that a blood sample be refrigerated and shipped to a medical center or laboratory, delaying diagnosis and possible treatment. Now, Washington University in St. Louis researchers have developed a test that quickly can detect the presence of Zika virus in blood. Although the new proof-of-concept technology has yet to be produced for use in medical situations, test results can be determined in minutes, and the materials do not require refrigeration. /articles//images/uploads/2017/08/10/Zikaone.jpg,/images/uploads/2017/08/10/Zikatwo.jpg Washington University in St. Louis Rewired Taste System Reveals How Flavors Move From Tongue to Brain /articles/rewired-taste-system-reveals-how-flavors-move-from-tongue-to-brain/?sc=c6444 /articles/rewired-taste-system-reveals-how-flavors-move-from-tongue-to-brain/?sc=c6444 Wed, 09 Aug 2017 13:00:00 EST Food Science,Neuro,Nature (journal),All Journal News Science News Research Results <img src="/legacy/image.php?image=/images/uploads/2017/08/7/tastebuds.jpg&width=100&height=150" alt="Newswise image" />By creating mice with mixed-up taste sensors, HHMI Investigator Charles Zuker and colleagues show how the taste system continually remakes itself. /articles//images/uploads/2017/08/7/tastebuds.jpg,/images/uploads/2017/08/7/mouseschematic.jpg Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) Can Florida Mosquitoes Transmit New Strains of Painful Chikungunya Virus? /articles/can-florida-mosquitoes-transmit-new-strains-of-painful-chikungunya-virus/?sc=c6444 /articles/can-florida-mosquitoes-transmit-new-strains-of-painful-chikungunya-virus/?sc=c6444 Thu, 27 Jul 2017 14:05:20 EST Infectious Diseases,Public Health,Zika Virus,PLOS,All Journal News Medical News Research Results <img src="/legacy/image.php?image=/images/uploads/2017/07/27/Aedesaegypti061217.jpg&width=100&height=150" alt="Newswise image" />UF/IFAS researchers used a baseline comparison of infection and transmission rates of Florida mosquitoes to those from the Dominican Republic, a region associated with numerous human cases. Barry Alto, an associate professor of entomology at the UF Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, led a team of UF/IFAS researchers that measured mosquito infection and transmission of the emergent strains of chikungunya -- Asian and Indian Ocean - in Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus mosquitoes. /articles//images/uploads/2017/07/27/Aedesaegypti061217.jpg University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Vaccines Protect Fetuses From Zika Infection, Mouse Study Shows /articles/vaccines-protect-fetuses-from-zika-infection-mouse-study-shows/?sc=c6444 /articles/vaccines-protect-fetuses-from-zika-infection-mouse-study-shows/?sc=c6444 Thu, 13 Jul 2017 12:00:00 EST All Journal News,Infectious Diseases,Vaccines,Women's Health,Influenza,Zika Virus,Cell (journal),Grant Funded News Medical News Research Results <img src="/legacy/image.php?image=/images/uploads/2017/07/7/ZikaGreen-700x466.jpg&width=100&height=150" alt="Newswise image" />A new study in mice shows that females vaccinated before pregnancy and infected with Zika virus while pregnant bear pups who show no trace of the virus. The findings offer the first evidence that an effective vaccine can protect vulnerable fetuses from Zika infection and resulting injury. /articles//images/uploads/2017/07/7/ZikaGreen-700x466.jpg Washington University in St. Louis Southern Research Probe of Zika Virus Looks Into 'Rebound Virus' /articles/southern-research-probe-of-zika-looks-into-rebound-virus/?sc=c6444 /articles/southern-research-probe-of-zika-looks-into-rebound-virus/?sc=c6444 Wed, 21 Jun 2017 10:05:29 EST Infectious Diseases,Public Health,Zika Virus Medical News,Science News Feature <img src="/legacy/image.php?image=/images/uploads/2017/06/21/DSC05055.JPG&width=100&height=150" alt="Newswise image" />Southern Research scientists are investigating how the Zika virus is able to find a safe harbor in an infected host's tissue and stage a rebound weeks after the virus was seemingly cleared by the immune system. /articles//images/uploads/2017/06/21/DSC05055.JPG Southern Research Zika Infections Could Be Factor in More Pregnancies /articles/zika-infections-could-be-factor-in-more-pregnancies/?sc=c6444 /articles/zika-infections-could-be-factor-in-more-pregnancies/?sc=c6444 Thu, 25 May 2017 14:00:00 EST Infectious Diseases,OBGYN,Women's Health,Zika Virus,PLOS,All Journal News,Featured: MedWire,Staff Picks Medical News Research Results <img src="/legacy/image.php?image=/images/uploads/2017/05/23/Aliota_mosquito16_4933.jpg&width=100&height=150" alt="Newswise image" />Zika virus infection passes efficiently from a pregnant monkey to its fetus, spreading inflammatory damage throughout the tissues that support the fetus and the fetus's developing nervous system, and suggesting a wider threat in human pregnancies than generally appreciated. /articles//images/uploads/2017/05/23/Aliota_mosquito16_4933.jpg University of Wisconsin-Madison Could Yellow Fever Rise Again? /articles/could-yellow-fever-rise-again/?sc=c6444 /articles/could-yellow-fever-rise-again/?sc=c6444 Mon, 17 Apr 2017 10:05:33 EST Infectious Diseases,Public Health,Ebola,Zika Virus,Vaccines Medical News Feature <img src="/legacy/image.php?image=/images/uploads/2017/04/17/BenjaminRush.jpg&width=100&height=150" alt="Newswise image" />Many people might not have heard of the Aedes aegypti mosquito until this past year, when the mosquito, and the disease it can carry - Zika - began to make headlines. But more than 220 years ago, this same breed of mosquito was spreading a different and deadly epidemic right here in Philadelphia and just like Zika, this epidemic is seeing a modern resurgence, with Brazil at its epicenter. /articles//images/uploads/2017/04/17/BenjaminRush.jpg Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania Pre-Existing Immunity to Dengue and West Nile Viruses May Cause Increased Risk in Zika-Infected /articles/pre-existing-immunity-to-dengue-and-west-nile-viruses-may-cause-increased-risk-in-zika-infected/?sc=c6444 /articles/pre-existing-immunity-to-dengue-and-west-nile-viruses-may-cause-increased-risk-in-zika-infected/?sc=c6444 Tue, 04 Apr 2017 17:05:58 EST All Journal News,Healthcare,Immunology,Infectious Diseases,Ebola,Influenza,West Nile Virus,Zika Virus,Public Health Medical News Research Results As the Zika virus continues to spread rapidly across the globe, it might pose a particular risk to people previously infected with two related viruses, dengue and West Nile, researchers at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai have found. Their study, published in the journal Science, may help explain the severe manifestations of Zika virus infection observed in specific populations, including those in South America. Mount Sinai Health System Saint Louis University Researchers Predict Zika Hot Spots in the U.S. /articles/saint-louis-university-researchers-predict-zika-hot-spots-in-the-u-s2/?sc=c6444 /articles/saint-louis-university-researchers-predict-zika-hot-spots-in-the-u-s2/?sc=c6444 Mon, 27 Mar 2017 11:05:30 EST Infectious Diseases,Public Health,Zika Virus,All Journal News Medical News Research Results <img src="/legacy/image.php?image=/images/uploads/2017/03/27/enbal-shacham-1152_1.jpg&width=100&height=150" alt="Newswise image" />Researchers predicted the places in the continental U.S. where Zika is most likely to be transmitted are the Mississippi delta and southern states extending northward along the Atlantic coast and in southern California. /articles//images/uploads/2017/03/27/enbal-shacham-1152_1.jpg Saint Louis University Medical Center For Female Mosquitoes, Two Sets of Odor Sensors Are Better Than One /articles/for-female-mosquitoes-two-sets-of-odor-sensors-are-better-than-one/?sc=c6444 /articles/for-female-mosquitoes-two-sets-of-odor-sensors-are-better-than-one/?sc=c6444 Fri, 17 Mar 2017 16:05:54 EST Environmental Health,Infectious Diseases,Public Health,Zika Virus,Scientific Reports,Nature (journal),All Journal News Medical News Research Results <img src="/legacy/image.php?image=/images/uploads/2017/03/17/SEMheadPseudocolor.jpg&width=100&height=150" alt="Newswise image" />A team of Vanderbilt biologists has found that the malaria mosquito has a second complete set of odor receptors that are specially tuned to human scents. /articles//images/uploads/2017/03/17/SEMheadPseudocolor.jpg Vanderbilt University Device Will Rapidly, Accurately and Inexpensively Detect Zika Virus at Airports and Other Sites /articles/device-will-rapidly-accurately-and-inexpensively-detect-zika-virus-at-airports-and-other-sites/?sc=c6444 /articles/device-will-rapidly-accurately-and-inexpensively-detect-zika-virus-at-airports-and-other-sites/?sc=c6444 Wed, 22 Feb 2017 09:00:06 EST Infectious Diseases,Public Health,Travel and Transportation,Zika Virus Medical News Announcement <img src="/legacy/image.php?image=/images/uploads/2017/02/21/mosquito_zika_grant.jpg&width=100&height=150" alt="Newswise image" />About the size of a tablet, a portable device that could be used in a host of environments like a busy airport or even a remote location in South America, may hold the key to detecting the dreaded Zika virus accurately, rapidly and inexpensively using just a saliva sample. For about $2 and within 15 minutes, researchers hope to accurately determine whether or not an individual has an active infection. /articles//images/uploads/2017/02/21/mosquito_zika_grant.jpg Florida Atlantic University Scripps Florida Scientists Find Clue to Why Zika, but Not Its Close Relatives, Causes Birth Defects /articles/scripps-florida-scientists-find-clue-to-why-zika-but-not-its-close-relatives-causes-birth-defects/?sc=c6444 /articles/scripps-florida-scientists-find-clue-to-why-zika-but-not-its-close-relatives-causes-birth-defects/?sc=c6444 Mon, 06 Feb 2017 15:05:39 EST Children's Health,Family and Parenting,Infectious Diseases,Public Health,Zika Virus,California,All Journal News Medical News Research Results <img src="/legacy/image.php?image=/images/uploads/2017/02/6/Photo1_Choe.jpg&width=100&height=150" alt="Newswise image" />Scientists from the Florida campus of The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) have uncovered the details behind the virus's unique ability to cross the placental barrier and expose the fetus to a range of birth defects that often go beyond microcephaly to include eye and joint injury, and even other types of brain damage. /articles//images/uploads/2017/02/6/Photo1_Choe.jpg Scripps Research Institute University of Miami Doctors Publish Study of First Locally-Acquired Zika Transmission /articles/university-of-miami-doctors-publish-study-of-first-locally-acquired-zika-transmission/?sc=c6444 /articles/university-of-miami-doctors-publish-study-of-first-locally-acquired-zika-transmission/?sc=c6444 Sun, 22 Jan 2017 14:05:27 EST Dermatology,Infectious Diseases,Public Health,Zika Virus,NEJM,All Journal News,Staff Picks Medical News Research Results <img src="/legacy/image.php?image=/images/uploads/2017/01/12/130705_web.jpg&width=100&height=150" alt="Newswise image" />Following the recent Zika outbreak in Miami-Dade County, a multidisciplinary team of physicians with the University of Miami Health System and Miller School of Medicine published a case study today in The New England Journal of Medicine, describing in detail the nation's first locally-transmitted case of Zika. /articles//images/uploads/2017/01/12/130705_web.jpg,/images/uploads/2017/01/12/130706_web.jpg University of Miami Health System, Miller School of Medicine Penn Study Identifies Potent Inhibitor of Zika Entry Into Human Cells /articles/penn-study-identifies-potent-inhibitor-of-zika-entry-into-human-cells/?sc=c6444 /articles/penn-study-identifies-potent-inhibitor-of-zika-entry-into-human-cells/?sc=c6444 Tue, 17 Jan 2017 12:00:00 EST Cell Biology,Infectious Diseases,Public Health,Zika Virus,Grant Funded News Medical News Research Results <img src="/legacy/image.php?image=/images/uploads/2017/01/17/CherryCellReportsZikapicJan17.jpg&width=100&height=150" alt="Newswise image" />Researchers identified a panel of small molecules that inhibit Zika virus infection, including one that stands out as a potent inhibitor of Zika viral entry into relevant human cell types. They screened a library of 2,000 bioactive compounds for their ability to block Zika virus infection in three distinct cell types using two strains of the virus. /articles//images/uploads/2017/01/17/CherryCellReportsZikapicJan17.jpg Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania New Mechanism to Control Human Viral Infections Discovered /articles/new-mechanism-to-control-human-viral-infections-discovered/?sc=c6444 /articles/new-mechanism-to-control-human-viral-infections-discovered/?sc=c6444 Mon, 05 Dec 2016 11:00:46 EST Infectious Diseases,Public Health,West Nile Virus,Zika Virus,California,Cell Biology,All Journal News Medical News Research Results <img src="/legacy/image.php?image=/images/uploads/2016/12/2/influenza-virus-nolabels.jpg&width=100&height=150" alt="Newswise image" />A team of researchers, co-led by a University of California, Riverside professor, has found a long-sought-after mechanism in human cells that creates immunity to influenza A virus, which causes annual seasonal epidemics and occasional pandemics. /articles//images/uploads/2016/12/2/influenza-virus-nolabels.jpg,/images/uploads/2016/12/2/Shou-Wei-Ding.jpg University of California, Riverside