Research says: Poor Diet of Mothers is Associated with Congenital Zika Syndrome

The study, published in the journal Science Advance, says Brazil has been widely affected by ZIKV, but 75 percent of CZS has been found in the socio-economically disadvantaged region of the Northeast.
Research says: Poor Diet of Mothers is Associated with Congenital Zika Syndrome

New York: Researchers have found that an increase in cases of Congenital zika syndrome (CZS) is associated with poor diet among mothers of infants. Congenital zika syndrome refers to congenital infection-related pathologies associated with the Zika Virus (ZIKV). This syndrome includes catastrophic conditions that have a major impact on the rest of the life of the individual and their family, such as the small (microcephaly) and unfolded (lyscephalic) brain, retinal abnormalities, enlarged ventricles of the heart, inter-hemispheric in the brain Lack of connection and calcification.

The study, published in the journal Science Advance, says Brazil has been widely affected by ZIKV, but 75 percent of CZS has been found in the socio-economically disadvantaged region of the Northeast. Researchers at Oxfor University in the US and Federal University of Rio de Janeiro in Brazil said, "We knew that CZS has the highest levels of this increase in infants in Brazil's lowest socio-economic status areas. That's why We have seen a possible nutritional link between ZIKV and potentially the most important co-factors. "

This study has shown that ZIKV congenital infection becomes even more dreadful due to some other reasons, including environmental co-factors, especially the lack of protein in the diet. The link between zika virus infection and CZS was proven in previous studies, which helped researchers understand how the infection affected brain and blood vessel development.

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