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BACKGROUND: Eight years after the epidemics in Brazil, children with congenital Zika syndrome (CZS) and their families confront ongoing health challenges. OBJECTIVE: This study aims to characterize how virally induced prenatal brain injury impacts development and functional outcomes among children diagnosed with CZS. METHODS: We performed a cross-sectional study of a consecutive series of children diagnosed with CZS. Using validated neurodevelopmental assessments, we evaluated gross motor function, manual ability, communication, eating and drinking, and visual function. RESULTS: Sixty children (29 males, and 31 females) met the inclusion criteria for the study. Comorbidities such as epilepsy (90.0%) and undernutrition (38.3%), along with clinical conditions including dysphagia (68.3%) and dependence on tube feeding (31.7%), were observed. Our results demonstrate a majority of children at level V - the most severe level within a five-tier system - in the Gross Motor Function (86.7%), Manual Ability (85.0%), Communication Function (68.3%), Eating and Drinking Ability (40.0%) Classification Systems, and level IV in the Visual Function Classification System (38.3%). CONCLUSION: CZS is associated with severe functional impairments and comorbidities, adversely impacting child development and quality of life. These findings reveal persistent challenges affecting the functioning of children with CZS, underscoring the need for continued support and specialized care. IMPACT: This study aimed to characterize the long-term clinical and functional characteristics of a subset of children with Congenital Zika Syndrome (CZS). We found that eight years after the Brazilian Zika epidemic, this subset of children with CZS continues to demonstrate major functional limitations impacting mobility, vision, and the ability to eat and drink. Our analysis documented a very high level of disability in several key functional classification systems. Notably, applying a new instrument for visual ability among children diagnosed with cerebral palsy, we found that more than 60% of the study group have poor or very poor visual function.
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Importance: The evolution of fetal brain injury by Zika virus (ZIKV) infection is not well described. Objectives: To perform longitudinal neuroimaging of fetuses and infants exposed to in utero maternal ZIKV infection using concomitant magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and ultrasonography (US), as well as to determine the duration of viremia in pregnant women with ZIKV infection and whether the duration of viremia correlated with fetal and/or infant brain abnormalities. Design, Setting, and Participants: A cohort of 82 pregnant women with clinical criteria for probable ZIKV infection in Barranquilla, Colombia, and Washington, DC, were enrolled from June 15, 2016, through June 27, 2017, with Colombian women identified by community recruitment and physician referral and travel-related cases of American women recruited from a Congenital Zika Program. Interventions and Exposures: Women received 1 or more MRI and US examinations during the second and/or third trimesters. Postnatally, infants underwent brain MRI and cranial US. Blood samples were tested for ZIKV. Main Outcomes and Measures: The neuroimaging studies were evaluated for brain injury and cerebral biometry. Results: Of the 82 women, 80 were from Colombia and 2 were from the United States. In 3 of 82 cases (4%), fetal MRI demonstrated abnormalities consistent with congenital ZIKV infection. Two cases had heterotopias and malformations in cortical development and 1 case had a parietal encephalocele, Chiari II malformation, and microcephaly. In 1 case, US results remained normal despite fetal abnormalities detected on MRI. Prolonged maternal polymerase chain reaction positivity was present in 1 case. Of the remaining 79 cases with normal results of prenatal imaging, postnatal brain MRI was acquired in 53 infants and demonstrated mild abnormalities in 7 (13%). Fifty-seven infants underwent postnatal cranial US, which detected changes of lenticulostriate vasculopathy, choroid plexus cysts, germinolytic/subependymal cysts, and/or calcification in 21 infants (37%). Conclusions and Relevance: In a cohort of pregnant women with ZIKV infection, prenatal US examination appeared to detect all but 1 abnormal fetal case. Postnatal neuroimaging in infants who had normal prenatal imaging revealed new mild abnormalities. For most patients, prenatal and postnatal US may identify ZIKV-related brain injury.