Zecavati is a pediatric neurologist who treats children with microcephaly and can describe the neurologic signs and symptoms associated with microcephaly, including the various causes of microcephaly and
how microcephaly affects a child's development and cognitive abilities.
Not exact matches
As we report in a collection of stories, much remains unclear, including the relationship between Zika infection and
microcephaly and
how best to combat the mosquitoes that spread the disease.
SAN FRANCISCO — Cell biologists are learning more about
how the Zika virus disrupts brain cells to cause the birth defect
microcephaly, in which a baby's brain and head are smaller than usual.
«
How Zika virus induces congenital
microcephaly.»
There are many mysteries about Zika and
how, in particular, it behaves in pregnant women, triggering some to miscarry and others to give birth to babies with brain disorders like
microcephaly.
That study showed a change in a pre-membrane protein could cause
microcephaly; the Nebraska study showed
how glycosylation of the envelope protein may contribute to the virus efficiently gaining entry into the brain.
(The organoid model has already been used to help explain
how a genetic mutation causes
microcephaly.)
The approach enabled a wide range of studies of human brain development, including implicating a new class of neural stem cell recently discovered by the lab in the evolutionary expansion of the human brain and identifying
how the mosquito - borne Zika virus may contribute to
microcephaly in infants infected in utero.
«Zika virus may cause
microcephaly by hijacking human immune molecule: Fetal brain model provides first clues on
how Zika virus blunts brain development; blocking mechanism reduces cell damage.»
«New insights into
how the Zika virus causes
microcephaly.»
Researchers from the University of Cambridge studied a variety of cell lines, including human neural stem cells, to investigate
how Zika virus infection can lead to
microcephaly.
Working with lab - grown human stem cells, a team of researchers suspect they have discovered
how the Zika virus probably causes
microcephaly in fetuses.
U.S. researchers say they have discovered
how the Zika virus can cause
microcephaly, a rare birth defect in which babies are born with abnormally small heads and brain problems.
The studies add to the understanding of
how the virus appears to be linked to the thousands of babies in Brazil who are being born with
microcephaly, a condition marked by an abnormally small head and that appear to be accompanied by brain defects in many cases related to Zika.
Understanding Zika's mechanisms will illuminate
how viral infection leads to birth defects such as
microcephaly, a condition marked by an abnormally small head and brain size, and could inform the development of therapies and vaccines, the study authors said.