Zika Virus Infection

ByStefania Carmona, MD, University of Alabama at Birmingham
Reviewed/Revised Modified Aug 2025
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Zika virus infection is a mosquito-borne viral infection that typically causes no symptoms but can cause fever, rash, joint pain, or infection of the membrane that covers the white of the eye (conjunctivitis, or pinkeye). Zika virus infection in a pregnant woman can cause microcephaly (a serious birth defect) and eye and other abnormalities in the baby.

  • The Zika virus is spread by mosquitoes, but it can also be spread through sexual intercourse, through blood transfusions, and from a pregnant woman to her baby before or during birth.

  • Symptoms of Zika virus infection, if they occur, are usually mild.

  • Doctors suspect Zika based on a person’s symptoms and recent travel history and confirm the diagnosis based on results of blood or urine tests.

  • There is no specific treatment for Zika virus infection, but rest, plenty of fluids, and acetaminophen to relieve fever and pain can help.There is no specific treatment for Zika virus infection, but rest, plenty of fluids, and acetaminophen to relieve fever and pain can help.

  • The best ways to prevent Zika virus infection are to avoid being bitten by mosquitoes and to avoid unprotected sex with a partner who has or may have the infection.

The Zika virus, like the viruses that cause dengue, yellow fever, and chikungunya disease, is an arbovirus, spread by a certain species of mosquito, the Aedes mosquito, which breeds in areas of stagnant water. These mosquitoes prefer to bite people and live near people, indoors and outdoors. They bite aggressively during the day indoors and in shady areas outdoors. They are most active during the several hours after sunrise and before sunset. They also bite at night.

In 1947, the Zika virus was first identified in monkeys in the Zika Forest of Uganda. The first large-scale outbreaks occurred in the South Pacific islands in 2007. Local transmission has been reported in Central and South America, the Caribbean, and Mexico in 2015. Local transmission means that people are bitten by an infected mosquito where they live or work, as opposed to becoming infected while they were traveling.

Local transmission of Zika virus infection has been reported in southeastern Florida and Texas. Zika virus infection has been reported in travelers returning to the United States after travel to countries where the virus is transmitted locally.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issues travel alerts when outbreaks occur. As of May 2025, there are no areas with major Zika virus outbreaks, though Zika virus infections continue to be reported throughout the Americas.

Transmission of Zika Virus

During the first week of infection, Zika virus is present in blood. When mosquitoes bite an infected person, they ingest blood containing the virus. The virus replicates in the mosquitoes and, after a few days, when the mosquitoes bite another person, they can transmit the virus to that person.

People who have traveled to areas where Zika virus infection is common may have Zika virus in their blood when they return home. If they live in an area with Aedes mosquitoes, the mosquitoes may bite them, then spread the virus to other people living in the area, resulting in local transmission of the Zika virus.

Although the Zika virus is usually spread by mosquitoes, it may be spread in other ways:

  • Sexual intercourse (vaginal, anal, or oral sex) and the sharing of sex toys

  • An infected pregnant woman to her baby before or during birth

  • Blood transfusion or organ transplantation

People with Zika virus infection can transmit the virus through sexual intercourse, whether or not they have any symptoms of infection.

Zika virus remains in semen much longer than it remains in blood and other body fluids. It can be spread by infected men to their sex partners (male or female) through unprotected (no condom) sexual intercourse, including vaginal, anal, and oral sex.

The Zika virus also remains in vaginal fluids after it disappears from blood and urine. Infected women can spread the virus to their male partner during sexual intercourse.

Transmission by blood transfusion has been reported in Brazil. However, no cases of transmission by blood transfusion have been confirmed in the United States.

The Zika virus can be spread from mother to child during pregnancy or around the time of birth.

At present, there have been no reports of infants becoming infected with Zika virus through breastfeeding. Even though the genetic material of Zika virus has been found in breast milk, risk of transmission from breast milk is outweighed by the nutritional benefits of breast milk for the infant.

Symptoms of Zika Virus Infection

Most people who become infected with the Zika virus have no symptoms, and many do not know they are infected. If symptoms occur, they are usually mild. Infections severe enough to require hospitalization are uncommon. Death due to Zika virus infection is rare.

Did You Know...

  • Most people with Zika virus infection do not have symptoms, and many do not know they are infected.

Symptoms of Zika virus infection include fever, conjunctivitis (pinkeye), joint and muscle aches, pain behind the eyes, headache, and a red, bumpy rash. Symptoms last 4 to 7 days.

Rarely, Guillain-Barré syndrome develops after a Zika virus infection. Guillain-Barré syndrome is a nerve disorder that causes muscle weakness and a pins-and-needles sensation or loss of sensation that usually lasts for a limited time.

Zika virus infection in babies of infected mothers

Zika virus infection during pregnancy can cause microcephaly or other problems in the baby. Microcephaly refers to an abnormally small head. The head is small because the brain does not develop normally and is small.

Babies infected before birth can have many problems besides microcephaly, sometimes including:

  • Seizures

  • Delays in development (for example, children may have problems with speech and may sit, stand, and walk later than expected)

  • Intellectual disability

  • Problems with movement and balance

  • Feeding problems, such as difficulty swallowing

  • Hearing loss

  • Vision problem

In the United States, several cases of microcephaly have been linked to the Zika virus. The mothers of these babies were probably infected when they traveled to a country where Zika virus infection is common.

Zika virus infection can cause other abnormalities in the brain and in the eyes (including cataracts). Infected babies may have excess skin on the scalp and, rarely, joints with a limited range of motion (such as clubfoot).

Diagnosis of Zika Virus Infection

  • Blood and urine tests

Doctors suspect Zika virus infection based on symptoms and on the places and dates of travel. However, symptoms of Zika virus infection resemble those of many tropical diseases (such as malaria, dengue, and other mosquito-borne viral infections), and it occurs in the same areas as these infections. Thus, tests are needed to confirm Zika virus infection.

Blood or urine tests can detect the virus if tests are done within a week or two after symptoms begin. These tests may use the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technique, which increases the amount of the virus’s genetic material and thus makes the virus easier to detect. Tests are also done to check for Zika virus antibody in the blood.

Lab Test

Routine testing for Zika virus infection is not recommended for pregnant women who do not have symptoms and ongoing exposure. However, for those in or with recent travel to areas with high levels of Zika virus or who have had sex with someone with a high risk of exposure, doctors may recommend testing.

Men who may have been exposed to the Zika virus are not routinely tested to determine whether they are infected. Instead measures to prevent transmission (such as condoms) are recommended whenever people who may have been exposed to the Zika virus have sexual intercourse (including vaginal, anal, and oral sex).

Treatment of Zika Virus Infection

  • Supportive care

There is no specific antiviral medication for Zika virus infection.

Treatment of Zika virus infection is supportive. It includes the following:

  • Rest

  • Fluids to prevent dehydration

  • Acetaminophen to relieve fever and pain Acetaminophen to relieve fever and pain

People who may have Zika virus infection should not take aspirin and or other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) until dengue has been ruled out. If people have dengue and take aspirin or another NSAID, the risk of excessive bleeding (hemorrhage) is increased. Dengue weakens blood vessels, making them more likely to break or leak, and NSAIDs make blood less likely to clot. Also, because of the risk of People who may have Zika virus infection should not take aspirin and or other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) until dengue has been ruled out. If people have dengue and take aspirin or another NSAID, the risk of excessive bleeding (hemorrhage) is increased. Dengue weakens blood vessels, making them more likely to break or leak, and NSAIDs make blood less likely to clot. Also, because of the risk ofReye syndrome, children (aged 18 years and under) should not be given aspirin., children (aged 18 years and under) should not be given aspirin.

If the Zika virus is detected in pregnant women, doctors may recommend that an ultrasound examination be done every 3 to 4 weeks to monitor how the fetus is developing. Doctors may refer women to a maternal-fetal medicine or infectious disease specialist with expertise in pregnancy management.

Doctors may monitor brain development for ≥ 2 years after birth in all infants born to mothers infected with Zika virus, whether or not the infants have symptoms.

Prevention of Zika Virus Infection

If possible, pregnant women should NOT travel to areas with ongoing Zika virus outbreaks. If traveling to such areas, pregnant women should talk with their doctor about the risks of infection and about the precautions to be taken to avoid mosquito bites during the trip.

There is no vaccine to prevent Zika virus infection.

Prevention of Zika virus infection depends on control of mosquitoes in areas where Zika virus infection is common and on prevention of mosquito bites when traveling to such areas.

Prevention of sexual transmission of Zika virus

The Zika virus can be sexually transmitted from men to their sex partner (male or female) and from women to men. The CDC has made recommendations about preventing Zika virus from being transmitted during sexual intercourse.

For pregnant women, precautions to prevent sexual transmission of the Zika virus are particularly important. If their partner (male or female) lives in or has traveled to an area where Zika virus infection is common, the couple should use a preventive measure for the entire duration of the pregnancy. The couple should do one of the following:

  • Abstain from sex (vaginal, anal, or oral)

  • Consistently and correctly use a barrier birth control method during sex (vaginal, anal, or oral)

This recommendation applies whether the partner has symptoms or not because most Zika virus infections do not cause symptoms, and when symptoms do develop, they are usually mild.

The CDC also provides recommendations when there is no existing pregnancy. The time periods for men and women differ because the Zika virus remains in semen longer than in other body fluids.

Men who have traveled to an area with current or past Zika virus transmission should:

  • Use condoms or abstain from sex for at least 3 months after he return, or from the start of symptoms or the date he was diagnosed with Zika.

Women who have traveled to an area with current or past Zika virus transmission should:

  • Use condoms or abstain from sex for at least 2 months after she returns, or from the start of symptoms or the date she was diagnosed with Zika.

Partners who have both traveled to an area with current or past Zika virus transmission should:

  • Use condoms or abstain from sex for at least 3 months after the later traveler returns, or from the start of symptoms or the date either was diagnosed with Zika.

Barrier methods include condoms (male and female) and dental dams (used during oral sex). These barriers can reduce the risk of getting the Zika virus during sex. To be effective, condoms and dental dams must be used correctly. They should be placed before sexual activity begins and remain until it ends (see Condoms). They should be used each time, during vaginal, anal, and oral sex.

Not sharing sex toys can also reduce the risk of sexual transmission.

More Information

The following English-language resources may be useful. Please note that The Manual is not responsible for the content of these resources.

  1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC): Zika Virus. January 30, 2025.

  2. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: Travelers' Health: Zika Travel Information.

  3. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: Zika Virus: How Zika Spreads. January 30, 2025.

  4. World Health Organization: Guideline: infant feeding in areas of Zika virus transmission, 2nd edition. Geneva, WHO. June 15, 2021.

  5. World Health Organization: Countries and territories with current or previous Zika virus transmission. February 15, 2023.

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