
Liliana Zuñiga Ayarza sits at her home with daughter Isabella Murillo remembering her mother, Belarmina Ayarza Garcia, who was one of several recent deaths linked to Guillain-Barre syndrome in Colombia. (Dania Maxwell for The Washington Post)
The mosquito-borne virus has spread rapidly here and across lowland Colombia, but the city is unusual for the subsequent outbreak of a rare, debilitating disorder known as Guillain-Barre syndrome, whose precise link to the virus remains unclear. Before Zika’s arrival in Turbo, a mostly Afro-Colombian town of 60,000 set amid vast banana plantations on the country’s north coast, doctors typically saw one case of Guillain-Barre a year, if that.
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Jose Molinares Cruz crosses a bridge outside his home in Turbo on Feb. 17. Cruz’s sister, Paula Molinares, 10, is being treated for Guillain-Barre in Montería, a major city in Colombia. (Dania Maxwell for The Washington Post)
Much of the global attention to the virus has zeroed in on a suspected link to microcephaly, a congenital defect that leaves babies with undersized heads and varying degrees of nerve damage. Brazilian officials say they may have hundreds or thousands of such cases related to Zika. But the photos of worried mothers and distressed infants may have given many people the impression
that the virus poses no major risk to anyone else.
That is not true, and certainly not here in Turbo, where rank sewage-filled canals line the streets and more and more people are arriving at the crowded emergency room with bloodshot eyes and itchy, red pockmarks, the telltale signs of Zika. Something about the virus – and researchers still don’t know what it is – appears to significantly increase the incidence of Guillain-Barre.
The first resident here to get it was 41-year-old Eliana Uribe. She called in sick to her cousin’s dress shop one morning in mid-January, not long after missing several days of work with a strange rash and sore joints. Something was wrong with her feet, she said.

Katarina Lemus Uribe shows a photograph of her cousin, Eliana Uribe Leon, shortly before she died from Guillain-Barre after being infected with the Zika virus in Turbo. (Dania Maxwell for The Washington Post)
Uribe’s family carried her to the emergency room. German Gomez, the internist at the small public hospital, thought it might be Guillain-Barre. But he wasn’t sure.
“I’d been here 15 months and hadn’t seen a single case,” he said.
Two days later, Uribe lost control of her tongue and facial muscles. She fell short of breath. Doctors rushed her to a bigger hospital.
Uribe died Feb. 2, her brain swamped in fluid – “severe hydrocephaly,” doctors told her family. “They never told us you could die from it,” said Katarina Lemus, Uribe’s cousin. What is hydrocephaly?
The day after Uribe’s death, another Turbo resident, Edelberto Padilla, 51, also died with Guillain-Barre, at a different hospital. He had the symptoms of Zika, too.
The Colombian government has confirmed three fatalities with Guillain-Barre, including two of the Turbo patients, blaming the deaths on Zika.

Alma Leon cries in her home in Turbo remembering her daughter, Eliana Uribe Leon, who recently died from complications related to Guillain-Barre on Feb. 2. (Dania Maxwell for The Washington Post)
The normal prevalence rate for Guillain-Barre is one or two cases per 100,000 people, said Kenneth Gorson, a professor of neurology at Tufts University in Boston, who is one of the leading U.S. authorities on the disorder, named for the two French neurologists who discovered it exactly 100 years ago.
At its most basic level, Guillain-Barre is what happens when a patient’s immune system fights off an infection and then goes haywire, as antibodies turn against the body’s own nervous system, Gorson said. They attack nerve cells, apparently mistaking them for a virus. In some instances,the antibodies strip away the membrane that protects nerve endings, called myelin, leaving the body’s muscles essentially unable to communicate with the brain.
In his courses, Gorson tells students that Guillain-Barre itself isn’t fatal. “What kills people is being paralyzed in an intensive care unit,” he said. “It’s the complications from being on a ventilator for long periods of time, the risk of blood clots, wound infections from lack of movement or other numerous medical complications that occur in paralyzed patients. Access
to quality care is critical.”
Adults and children appear to be equally at risk of developing Guillain-Barre, but patients who already have health problems or compromised immune systems are less able to recover from it.
Belarmina Ayarza, 58, contracted Zika while visiting her family in Turbo in January, then checked into a hospital in the city of Medellin 10 days later when she lost feeling in her legs. Doctors diagnosed Guillain-Barre, said her son, Jose Barrios. Ayarza was a diabetic, with high blood pressure. But her condition stabilized and Barrios was able to take her home in a wheelchair. On Feb. 7 she started convulsing in her bed. “I picked her up and held her in my arms,” Barrios said, “but she was gone.” Doctors said she’d had a heart attack.
Lack of high-level care
In the rural areas of Latin America where Zika is spreading, high-level care is often unavailable. Wait times at public hospitals, especially those swamped by Zika patients, can discourage patients from seeking care. Those with aggressive Guillain-Barre need complicated blood transfusions or a treatment known as immunoglobulin therapy to essentially wash out the harmful antibodies. But the treatments can cost more than $10,000, and patients may need several rounds.
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North and South America. (Daron Taylor,Claritza Jimenez/The Washington
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Guillain-Barre.
“We are seeing a spike everywhere that we are seeing the Zika virus,” said Tarun Dua, a neurologist at the World Health Organization (WHO). What’s unclear is whether Zika is causing Guillain-Barre or whether it is”cross-reacting” with antibodies from other widespread mosquito-borne viruses such as dengue or chikungunya.
Another major problem: There is no widely available, quick test for Zika, and the virus remains in an infected patient’s blood only for about a week. So it’s difficult to test for Zika in patients hospitalized with Guillain-Barre symptoms.
“The hypothesis is that Zika may be a more efficient trigger of Guillain-Barre, but we can’t say that at the moment,” said Anthony Costello, director of maternal, child and adolescent development at WHO. “The detective work is starting, but it takes time.”
In Turbo, patients diagnosed with Zika – whose symptoms include rash, joint pain, headaches and bloodshot eyes – are typically given acetaminophen and sent home to rest.
But they may share their homes with the Aedes aegypti mosquitoes that pick upthe disease from infected people and spread it. They breed in stagnant water.

Wilfrido Manuel Molinares looks out on a sewage canal to arrive at his home in Turbo on Feb. 17. His daughter, Paula Molinares, 10, is being treated for Guillain-Barre in Montería. (Dania Maxwell for The Washington Post)
There are no health inspectors or fumigation crews to be seen. A foul, black bisque of sewage and trash oozes through a canal right in front of the home of Wilfrido Molinares. Children and horses walk through the muck; a frayed sofa sits half-submerged, rotting.
Molinares’s daughter Paula, 10, has been hospitalized with Guillain-Barre for nearly two weeks in the nearby city of Monteria. She had Zika symptoms before that. He’s had Zika, too, and was laid up from his construction job for two months last summer with chikungunya, which causes fevers and joint and muscle pain. Zika seemed mild compared with that, he said, until his daughter couldn’t stand on her own.

The window from Wilfrido Manuel Molinares’ bedroom looks out into a puddle of stagnant water in Turbo, Colombia on February 17. (Dania Maxwell for the Washington Post)
“There are a lot of mosquitoes here,” Molinares said. “I bought mosquito repellent and spray it all over. But when the sun goes down, sometimes you can’t even sit outside.”
Culled from The Washington post
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