Off the wire
India seeks deportation of billionaire businessman from Britain  • New home rate slows, but New Zealand construction at record high  • Lao president to visit China  • Commentary: China-Japan rapprochement should mean less empty talk from Tokyo  • China urges lasting, balanced political solution to Ukraine crisis  • Backgrounder: China has indisputable sovereignty over South China Sea islands  • Xinhua China news advisory -- April 29  • 1st LD: DPRK sentences S.Korea-born American to 10 years of hard labor for subversion, espionage  • Spotlight: DPRK's repeated missile launches add to uncertainty of situation on Korean Peninsula  • Foreign exchange rates in Thailand  
You are here:   Home

3rd case of Zika virus detected in S. Korea

Xinhua, April 29, 2016 Adjust font size:

The third case of the Zika virus was detected in South Korea on Friday from a man having traveled to the Philippines, the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (KCDC) said.

The 21-year-old man, who had made a trip to the Southeast Asian country for five days through April 14, tested positive for the mosquito-borne virus.

The virus was detected from his saliva and urine, but he didn't show any symptoms of the virus such as rash and muscle pain. So, he was not classified as a confirmed patient, according to the KCDC.

The man's 20-year-old brother, the second Zika case who had traveled to the Philippines together with the man, was classified as a confirmed patient on Wednesday.

The younger brother developed symptoms of flu from April 20 and started to show rash in his body on April 22. He was discharged from a hospital on Thursday as he recovered from the viral disease.

The first South Korean Zika case was found from a 43-year-old man on March 22.

Zika is a virus that is primarily spread by mosquito bites, particularly risky for pregnant women as it is thought to be linked to a rare birth defect - microcephaly that causes newborn babies to have unusually small heads and damaged brains.

The Zika virus is believed not to be spread by ordinary touches between humans, but it can be transmitted through sex and blood transfusion. Cases of sexual transmission from travelers to their sexual partners had been reported from the United States and Europe.

The KCDC advised pregnant women not to travel to Zika-infected countries, while recommending fertile women delay pregnancy for at least two months after returning from those countries.

Zika was first found in Africa and spread to Asia and Lain America. The virus is spreading rapidly in Latin America, while Thailand and the Philippines are the most Zika-infected countries in Asia. Endit