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Thu, 2016-09-15 10:57 — Kathy Gilbeaux
Infants born with microcephaly are held by mothers at a meeting for mothers of children with special needs in Recife, Brazil. Mario Tama/Getty Images
npr.org - by Susan Brink - September 14, 2016
"These babies do not catch up as they grow," says Dr. Antonia Augusto Moura da Silva of the Federal University of Maranhao, Sao Luis, Brazil.
He's describing the findings from a study of 48 babies whose mothers were believed to have been infected with the Zika virus. Forty-two of the children were diagnosed with microcephaly. The study, on the early neurological growth pattern of the infants, will be published in the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases in November but was released early online.
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