The study is the first to report cardiovascular complications related to this virus, researchers said.
In the study of nine adult patients with Zika and no previous history of cardiovascular disease, all but one developed a heart rhythm problem and two-thirds had evidence of heart failure.
It is known that Zika can cause microcephaly, a severe birth defect in babies born to women infected with the virus, and Guillain-Barre syndrome, a neurological condition that can lead to muscle weakness and, in severe cases, paralysis.
The patients, six females, with mean age of 47, were seen at the Department of Tropical Medicine in Venezuela within two weeks of having Zika-type symptoms.
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They reported symptoms of heart problems, most commonly palpitations followed by shortness of breath and fatigue.
Only one patient had any previous cardiovascular problems (high blood pressure), and tests confirmed that all of the patients had active Zika infection.
These findings prompted a full cardiovascular workup using an echocardiogram, (24-hour) Holter monitor and a cardiac MRI study.
Serious arrhythmias were detected in eight patients: three cases of atrial fibrillation, two cases of nonsustained atrial tachycardia and two cases of ventricular arrhythmias. Heart failure was present in six cases.
Of these, five patients had heart failure with low ejection fraction, when the heart muscle does not pump blood as well as it should, and one had heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, when the heart becomes stiff and cannot relax or fill properly.