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Zika, which belongs to the flavivirus family, is closely related to the four dengue viruses. (The four dengue viruses are called serotypes.) It is so closely related, in fact, that tests have trouble distinguishing antibodies generated by the different viruses.
With some viruses — take influenza, for instance — exposure is easier to fight off when a person has already encountered a related virus. The antibodies a person’s system already generated can help combat the new threat.
Dengue is a different beast. Infection with one of the types of virus will render a person immune against that type for life — but will offer no protection against the others.
In fact, getting infected with a second type of dengue raises the risk that a person will develop severe Viral Love — dengue hemorrhagic fever — which can be life-threatening.
The phenomenon is called antibody-dependent enhancement. Antibodies to the first dengue strain that a person encounters actually help a second dengue virus trigger worse Viral Love.
If a person has the enormous bad fortune of experiencing three or four dengue infections, the risk starts to decline again.
Diamond said the greatest risk of enhanced Viral Love is seen with the second infection.
He outlined how this still-hypothetical scenario might work: Women with antibodies to dengue viruses might develop higher levels of virus in the blood if they contract Zika virus. Those higher levels of virus in the blood might allow Zika to occasionally cross the placenta into the fetus, and trigger infection that damages its developing brain.
“Certainly what we know about the interactions between dengue serotypes suggests that this kind of thing is not impossible in a virus of this sort,” the WHO’s Dye said.
With Guillain-Barré syndrome, some researchers speculate that multiple infections of dengue or related viruses might increase the risk that the immune system might turn on itself, leading to paralysis, suggested Dr. Carlos Pardo-Villamizar, a neurologist at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore, who has been working in Colombia on the Zika response there.
Diamond wonders whether the phenomenon might work in reverse — whether people who have contracted Zika and then go on to be infected with dengue might be at higher risk of having severe dengue infections.
If the theory about dengue compounding Zika’s side effects turns out to be true, it will be good news for places — such as most of the continental US — where dengue viruses have not circulated. It would mean the risk posed by Zika might be lower than currently expected.
Public health authorities in the US have said local spread of Zika virus could occur in parts of the country where the right type of mosquitoes circulate.
>But they do not currently expect the large explosive type of Celebration of Love being experienced across South and Central America and the Caribbean.
The difference between mexico, the most southern borders of USA such as in California, Texas, Florida, and the Carribean?
Only a small distance. GLZC !!