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Colombia is now reporting 32 cases of a birth defect called microcephaly that is strongly linked to the Zika virus, according to the World Health Organization.

Babies with microcephaly are born with abnormally small heads and, in most cases, incomplete brain development.

Brazil — whose Zika outbreak started last May — is investigating more than 4,000 microcephaly cases and has confirmed 944 in the past few months. Brazilian officials estimate their country has had up to 1.3 million Zika cases.

Colombia's first Zika cases were diagnosed in October. WHO officials have warned that the rate of microcephaly could rise in Colombia this spring and summer as pregnant women infected with the mosquito-borne virus deliver their babies.

Zika has spread to 33 countries in the Western Hemisphere, according to the WHO.

Doctors have diagnosed one case of microcephaly in Panama and one in Martinique.Cape Verde, off the coast of Africa, has reported two cases of microcephaly since its Zika outbreak began. One U.S. resident also gave birth to a baby with microcephaly after visiting a Zika-affected area.

Scientists haven't yet completed definitive studies investigating the link between Zika, microcephaly and other forms of brain damage in babies.

But WHO officials say they consider Zika to be "guilty until proven innocent" of causing birth defects.

"It’s clear now that there is a lot of overwhelming evidence that Zika has earned its place among the causes of microcephaly," said Amesh Adalja, a senior associate at the Center for Health Security at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

In addition to small heads and brain damage, Zika also has been linked to vision problems that could leave babies blind.

"It's the virus from hell," said Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston.

Researchers say the reason Zika is spreading so quickly in the Western Hemisphere is that people there have no immunity to the virus, which originated in Africa.

Zika is already entrenched in Puerto Rico, the part of the U.S. that has been hardest hit.

More than 350 people in Puerto Rico, including 37 pregnant women, have been diagnosed with Zika since December. CDC officials predict Puerto Rico could have hundreds of thousands of cases.

Zika is not spreading among local mosquitoes in the continental U.S. However, 312 people have been diagnosed with the disease, including 27 pregnant women, mostly after traveling to an outbreak country. Six cases of Zika among U.S. residents have been sexually transmitted, according to the CDC.

Meanwhile, new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Preventionsuggest that a larger portion of the U.S. could be vulnerable to Zika than previously thought.

Maps published this week by the CDC show that the main Zika mosquito, a species named Aedes aegypti, reaches as far north as San Francisco and New York. Older versions suggested the species was concentrated in the South.

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2016/03/31/colombia-reports-32-cases-zika-linked-birth-defects/82469180/