For pregnant people, Zika can be a serious concern. A pregnant person can pass the virus on to the unborn child. This is true even if the pregnant person has no symptoms. The virus can cause a condition called microcephaly in these infants. Babies with this serious birth defect are born with a smaller than normal head size and a less developed brain. Babies can have a range of problems depending on how severe their microcephaly is. They may have developmental and neurological problems, learning disabilities, vision, hearing, and swallowing problems, or seizures.
These risks have led the CDC to issue recommendations that pregnant people not travel to areas with active Zika virus transmission. Before traveling anywhere, talk to your doctor so you can carefully consider the risks of Zika and other infectious diseases.
If you want to become pregnant in the near future, but you or your partner live in or traveled to an area with a Zika outbreak or an area with risk of Zika infection, talk with your doctor about your planned pregnancy.
The Zika virus may also very rarely cause Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) in adults. GBS causes muscle weakness or paralysis. If the muscle weakness is bad enough or widespread enough, the person may need to use a machine to breathe (ventilator). Most people with GBS recover. Recovery may take as little as a few weeks or as long as a few years. Sometimes recovery is not complete. Researchers are looking more closely at the possible link between Zika and GBS.