Active Zika virus has been detected in saliva and urine, Brazilian scientists say.
The finding does not mean the virus can be readily transmitted through these bodily fluids.
Meanwhile,
the US has advised men to abstain from sex or use condoms after
visiting affected countries, if their partner is pregnant.
While Zika is normally mild, the infection has been linked to thousands of suspected birth defects.
The
updated advice says avoiding mosquitoes remains the best way to prevent
infection, but advises men returning from affected countries to
"correctly use condoms during sex or abstain from sexual activity for
the duration of the pregnancy".
In another development the
governor of Puerto Rico has declared a public health emergency over
Zika. The US territory has 22 confirmed cases.
Prof Jonathan Ball, a virologist at the University of Nottingham, told the BBC: "Because we can detect a virus in a particular body fluid it does not mean that it will become an important source of virus for transmission to humans.
"At the peak of virus replication in the blood, virus can often be detected in other body fluids, but the levels of virus are often much lower and there is no obvious or efficient means for the virus to get from that bodily fluid into another person's bloodstream."
The risks of different modes of infection are still unclear.
But experts say that the million-plus suspected cases in the Americas have been contained to areas where the mosquito is found, suggesting it does not spread easily through other means.
Brazil has seen 4,783 suspected cases of babies born with small brains, although only 404 have been confirmed, 709 have been rejected and 3,670 are still being investigated.
Source: BBC

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