Tropical
Tonga declares Zika outbreak after five cases confirmed
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[February 05, 2016]
By Matt Siegel
SYDNEY (Reuters) - The tiny South Pacific
island nation of Tonga has declared an outbreak of the Zika virus after
five cases of the mosquito-borne illness were confirmed and another 259
suspected, the country's chief medical officer said on Friday.
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Chief Medical Officer Dr. Reynold Ofanoa said that officials became
suspicious after a sharp rise in the number of patients suffering
acute fever and rashes since the beginning of the year.
"We were suspecting a probable outbreak of either Zika, dengue or
chikungunya," he told Reuters, referring to two other mosquito-borne
viruses. "So we sent the blood specimens for testing overseas and
when we obtained the results it showed that we've got confirmed
positive blood tests for Zika."
The tropical archipelago had never previously had any confirmed
cases of the Zika virus, Ofanoa said, so it was likely brought into
the country by an infected person and then spread by mosquitoes.
"I think this is the first time it happened in Tonga, so surely the
disease came from overseas."
There were no immediate plans to introduce travel restrictions in or
out of the country, he said.
Since it was detected in Brazil in April, the virus has spread to 26
countries in the Americas. The World Health Organization declared
Zika an international health emergency this week, citing a "strongly
suspected" relationship between the virus in pregnancy and
microcephaly, a condition in which infants are born with abnormally
small heads and can suffer developmental problems.
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Brazil's government is investigating the potential link between Zika
and more than 4,000 suspected cases of microcephaly. Researchers
have identified evidence of Zika in 17 of those cases but have not
confirmed the virus can cause the condition.
(Reporting by Matt Siegel; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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