Several viruses can affect the fetus during the embryonic period, causing brain damage. Many of these injuries are inflammatory and characterized by ependymitis and small intraventricular hemorrhage with secondary hydrocephalus, or they cause real destruction of the brain parenchyma with cell growth arrest, apoptosis, calcifications, cerebral malformations, and microcephaly. Infection earlier in gestation results in the most severe damage to the brain parenchyma, between 8 and 12 weeks (i.e., during the organogenesis of the brain), structural abnormalities can develop. One of the first associations between maternal infection and fetal disease was attributed to Morquio [10], who reported cases of hydrocephalus in children of mothers with smallpox in 1903. In Brazil in 1964, Machado de Almeida [11] demonstrated a relationship between maternal smallpox and the presence of fetal hydrocephalus when maternal symptoms occurred in the last two trimesters of pregnancy. In two cases where necropsy was performed, periventricular calcifications were observed that did not appear on x-rays, and ependymitis without the presence of brain malformations was also observed. Swan et al. in 1943 [12] and Swan in 1944 [13] concluded that when a woman contracts rubella in the first 2 months of pregnancy, the likelihood of giving birth to a child with congenital defects is 100 %, whereas the risk is reduced to 50 % if the disease focus is in the third month. The microcephaly resulting from rubella is explained by chronic leptomeningitis and secondary vascular lesions. Barkovich and Lindan in 1994 [14] reported cytomegalovirus infection results in inadequate perfusion of the placenta that results in ischemia and that the virus has special affinity for immature cells of the germinal matrix that would result in loss of brain tissue and abnormalities of the cortex. Early infection with cytomegalovirus between 16 and 18 weeks of gestation, i.e., occurring at the onset of the neuronal migration, can lead to lissencephaly.
Recently, Mlakar et al. (2016) [8] demonstrated some evidence of Zika virus neurotropism, by isolating viral particles solely in the neural tissue of a fetus aborted with 37 weeks of gestation and whose mother presented signs of Zika infection in the 13th week of gestation. Moreover, Abidi et al. (2016) [15] suggested two hypotheses to explain the mechanisms in which the Zika virus infection causes the microcephaly in pregnant women. The first hypothesis considers the possibility of direct delivery of virus through the placenta and his neurotropism causing brain tissue damage in an early stage of the pregnancy. The second considers the placenta mediates a response to Zika virus infection that could change the profile of inflammatory markers in the fetal tissues.
The radiological aspects of Zika virus infection identified in the present study suggest acute destruction of the brain parenchyma, with evidence of cell migration abnormalities leading to intracranial hypotension, followed by overriding of the skull bones, filling of the space between the brain and bone with cerebrospinal fluid, and microcephaly. The shape of the skull in the anterior portion closely resembles the so-called lemon sign found in fetuses with intracranial hypotension in Chiari malformation type II with myelomeningocele and cerebrospinal fluid leakage. In contrast to previous observations for other viruses, we found an anarchic pattern of intracranial calcifications, with gross calcifications, involving the subcortical cortical transition and the basal ganglia. Periventricular calcification was found in only one case. The location of calcifications suggests that the destruction of the brain parenchyma occurs by vasculopathy and not by ependymitis or bleeding as seen in cases of coxsackie infection. We also observed preservation of the brainstem, the cerebellum, and the medulla, suggesting that viral involvement spared the vertebrobasilar circulation, mainly the carotid system. The presence of lissencephaly suggests that in most cases the infection occurred earlier than 18 weeks of gestation. Viral tropism to the germinal matrix and apoptosis may also explain these findings. We did not observe cases of schizencephaly, similarly to the findings of Schuler-Faccini et al. [7] in 35 patients. The viral pathophysiology of this type of infection and the type of immunity obtained following the primary infection remain unclear. If the immunity is similar to that against the rubella virus, vaccination may be able to eradicate the fetal disease. However, if immunity is not complete, a second exposure to the virus during pregnancy would not prevent viremia, and therefore, damage to the fetal nervous system may occur.