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Clinical and Preclinical Evidence for Adverse Neurodevelopment after Postnatal Zika Virus Infection
2021
Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease
Although the Zika virus (ZIKV) typically causes mild or no symptoms in adults, during the 2015−2016 outbreak, ZIKV infection in pregnancy resulted in a spectrum of diseases in infants, including birth defects and neurodevelopmental disorders identified in childhood. While intense clinical and basic science research has focused on the neurodevelopmental outcomes of prenatal ZIKV infection, less is known about the consequences of infection during early life. Considering the neurotropism of ZIKV
doi:10.3390/tropicalmed6010010
pmid:33445671
fatcat:6cjpzix4mjc4hojbwmsq4xbn34