The first known case of a woman spreading the Zika virus to a man
during unprotected sex was reported on Friday in New York City, health
authorities said.
Until now, experts were aware only of cases in
which men spread the virus to their partners during sex, as well as
transmission by mosquito bites.
The
New York case involved a "nonpregnant woman in her twenties who
reported she had engaged in a single event of condomless vaginal
intercourse with a male partner the day she returned to New York City
from travel to an area with ongoing Zika virus transmission," the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.
Its report did not specify where the woman may have been infected.
The next day, she developed fever, back pain, swelling and numbness and tingling in her hands and feet.
She
tested positive for Zika, a typically mosquito-borne virus that is
spreading rapidly through the Caribbean and Latin America.
Her male partner said he had not traveled outside the United States during the prior year.
He
also said he did not have any other recent sexual partners and had not
been bitten by mosquitoes in the week before his illness.
"The New
York City report of female-to-male sexual transmission of Zika virus
infection is the first documented case of sexual transmission of Zika
from a woman to her sex partner and adds to the growing body of
knowledge about the sexual transmission of Zika," the CDC said.
Zika can cause birth defects, including the brain and skull deformity known as microcephaly.
Health
authorities are urging pregnant women to abstain from sex or use
barrier methods of contraception during sex if their partners have
traveled to or live in areas where the Zika virus is present.
"Although
no cases of woman-to-woman Zika transmission have been reported, these
recommendations now also apply to female sex partners of pregnant
women," the CDC said.
The federal agency said it is updating its
guidelines because the current advice to prevent sexual transmission of
Zika "is based on the assumption that transmission occurs from a male
partner to a receptive partner."
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