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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (malaria)
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This paper reviews the neurological complications of malaria. Cerebral malaria, the acute encephalopathy which complicates exclusively the infection by Plasmodium falciparum commonly affects children and adolescents in hyperendemic areas. Plugging of cerebral capillaries and venules by clumped, parasitized red blood cells causing blood sludging in the capillary circulation is one hypothesis to explain its pathogenesis. The other is a humoral hypothesis which proposes a nonspecific, immune-mediated, inflammatory response with release of vasoactive substances capable of producing endothelial damage and alterations of permeability. Cerebral malaria has a mortality rate up to 50%, and also a considerable longterm morbidity, particularly in children. Hypoglycemia, largely in patients treated with quinine, may complicate the cerebral symptomatology. Other central nervous manifestations of malaria include intracranial hemorrhage, cerebral arterial occlusion, and transient extrapyramidal and neuropsychiatric manifestations. A self-limiting, isolated cerebellar ataxia, presumably caused by immunological mechanisms, in patients recovering from falciparum malaria has been recognized in Sri Lanka. Malaria is a common cause of febrile seizures in the tropics, and it also contributes to the development of epilepsy in later life. Several reports of spinal cord and peripheral nerve involvement are also available. A transient muscle paralysis resembling periodic paralysis during febrile episodes of malaria has been described in some patients. The pathogenesis of these neurological manifestations in malaria remains unexplored, but offers excellent perspectives for research at clinical as well as experimental level.
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PMID:Neurological complications of malaria. 129 73

The involvement of the nervous system in malaria is reviewed in this paper. Cerebral malaria, the acute encephalopathy which complicates exclusively the infection by Plasmodium falciparum commonly affects children and adolescents in hyperendemic areas. Plugging of cerebral capillaries and venules by clumped, parasitized red cells causing sludging in the capillary circulation is one hypothesis to explain its pathogenesis. The other is a humoral hypothesis which proposes nonspecific, immune-mediated, inflammatory responses with release of vasoactive substances capable of producing endothelial damage and alterations of permeability. Cerebral malaria has a mortality rate up to 50%, and also a considerable longterm morbidity, particularly in children. Hypoglycemia, largely in patients treated with quinine, may complicate the cerebral symptomatology. Other central nervous manifestations of malaria include intracranial hemorrhage, cerebral arterial occlusion, and transient extrapyramidal and neuropsychiatric manifestations. A self-limiting, isolated cerebellar ataxia, presumably caused by immunological mechanisms, in patients recovering from falciparum malaria has been recognized in Sri Lanka. Malaria is a common cause of febrile seizures in the tropics, and it also contributes to the development of epilepsy in later life. Several reports of spinal cord and peripheral nerve involvement are also available. A transient muscle paralysis resembling periodic paralysis during febrile episodes of malaria has been described in some patients. The pathogenesis of these neurological manifestations remains unexplored, but offers excellent perspectives for research at a clinical as well as experimental level.
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PMID:Neurological manifestations of malaria. 130 75

A random cluster sample survey of approximately 18,000 people in 11 villages was performed in Ulanga, a Tanzanian district with a population of approximately 139,000 people. Well-instructed fourth-year medical students and neurologic and psychiatry nurses identified persons with epilepsy using a screening questionnaire and sent them to a neurologist for detailed evaluation. Identified were 207 subjects (88 male, 119 female) with epilepsy; of these, 185 (89.4%) (80 male, 105 female) had active epilepsy. The prevalence of active epilepsy was 10.2 in 1,000. Prevalence among villages varied, ranging from 5.1 to 37.1 in 1,000 (age-adjusted 5.8-37.0). In a 10-year period (1979-1988) 122 subjects living in the 11 villages developed epilepsy, with an annual incidence of 73.3 in 100,000. Generalized tonic-clonic seizures (GTCS) accounted for 58% and partial seizures accounted for 31.9%, whereas in 10.1% seizures were unclassifiable. Of the partial seizures, secondarily generalized seizures were the most common. Possible etiologic or associated factors were identifiable in only 25.3% of cases. Febrile convulsions were associated in 13.4 of cases. Other associated factors included unspecified encephalitis (4.7%), cerebral malaria (1.9%), birth injury (1.4%), and other (3%). In 38% of the cases, there was a positive family history of epilepsy.
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PMID:Prevalence and incidence of epilepsy in Ulanga, a rural Tanzanian district: a community-based study. 146 63

Three cases of tonic-clonic seizures following therapeutic doses of chloroquine for malaria are presented. A casual relationship between seizures and chloroquine therapy is suggested. There have been no previous reports of this adverse effect of chloroquine therapy in patients normally resident in a holoendemic area for malaria.
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PMID:Seizures associated with chloroquine therapy. 148 19

Classification, management and prevention of seizures in children are summarized for clinicians in Papua New Guinea. Seizures are classified as febrile with or without underlying brain pathology, and afebrile, including neonatal fits, infantile spasms, myoclonic jerks, akinetic seizures, tonic clonic fits, petit mal, benign focal, and psychomotor seizures. In all cases the first step is to secure the airway, then do a fingerstick and treat hypoglycemia, and finally stop the fit if it is prolonged with paraldehyde, diazepam, phenobarbitone or phenytoin. A cause for the seizure should be sought: physical exam, especially tympanic membranes and throat, blood slide for malaria, lumbar puncture for signs of meningitis, blood culture, serum calcium, and other chemistries. Some empirical treatments to use for negative findings include: dextrose, calcium gluconate, magnesium SO4, pyridoxine, quinine and Fansidar. Hyperthermia in a febrile child can be reversed with cool sponging. The author recommends prescribing phenobarbitone to prevent subsequent simple febrile seizures if the child has 3 or more, then slowly withdrawing the drug if the child is seizure free for a year. Drug therapy for the various other types of seizures available in Papua New Guinea include sodium valproate by special order, and phenobarbitone, phenytoin, carbamazepine, nitrazepam, ethosuximide, and prednisolone. A table is provided to help select the drug for each seizure type, e.g. ethosuximide for petit mal, prednisolone for infantile spasms, and carbamazepine for various types of focal and psychomotor seizures.
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PMID:Convulsions in children. 150 14

1. A method is described for the measurement of phenobarbitone (PB) by reversed phase high performance liquid chromatography (h.p.l.c.) from small samples of whole blood dried onto filter paper strips. 2. The disposition of PB given prophylactically to young children with severe malaria on parenteral quinine is contrasted with that in aparasitaemic Kenyan children on no antimalarial drugs. There were no differences in the disposition of PB between the two groups. 3. Peak blood PB concentrations were equal to or greater than 15 mg l-1 in 27% of the patients on quinine and 23% of those not on quinine; a concentration of 10 mg l-1 was achieved or exceeded by 100% and 92% of each group, respectively, and was maintained for 39 +/- 24 h (mean +/- s.d.), and 33 +/- 21 h, respectively. 4. In an open, dose-finding study, the progress of young children with cerebral malaria given prophylactic PB (10 mg kg-1), was contrasted with that of controls given no seizure prophylaxis. 5. The drug had no apparent effect on depth or duration of coma, but neither was the incidence of seizures reduced. 6. A controlled trial of prophylactic PB in young children with cerebral malaria is needed, but a larger dose than 10 mg kg-1 should be studied.
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PMID:Prophylactic phenobarbitone in young children with severe falciparum malaria: pharmacokinetics and clinical effects. 155 Jun 96

Since the time of its introduction in 1985, mefloquine (Lariam) has been used extensively for malaria prophylaxis. The international Drug Safety Department of the manufacturer gathered all spontaneous adverse drug reactions reported in association with this drug from all available sources and monitored the literature on a world-wide basis. The serious neurologic and psychiatric adverse events reported in association with Lariam prophylaxis from the time of introduction until May 1991 were reviewed. During this time, 59 serious neurologic and psychiatric adverse reactions were reported as follows: 26 convulsions, 12 depressions, 20 psychotic episodes, and one toxic encephalopathy; none were fatal. While spontaneous reporting systems are biased by under-reporting, they provide useful instruments for analysis of clinical risks factors. The neurologic and psychiatric adverse events reported in association with mefloquine prophylaxis were of the same types as those reported with other quinine derivative antimalarials. The precise mechanism of serious neurologic and psychiatric reactions is unknown. The only patient population identified at this time as having an increased risk of developing these serious reactions to mefloquine are persons with a history of seizures or manic-depressive illness. Mefloquine prophylaxis should not be prescribed to such patients.
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PMID:Mefloquine prophylaxis: an overview of spontaneous reports of severe psychiatric reactions and convulsions. 159 72

This study describes neuropsychiatric side effects in patients after treatment with mefloquine. Reactions consisted mainly of seizures, acute psychoses, anxiety neurosis, and major disturbances of sleep-wake rhythm. Side effects occurred after both therapeutic and prophylactic intake and were graded from moderate to severe. In a risk analysis of neuropsychiatric side effects in Germany, it is estimated that one of 8,000 mefloquine users suffers from such reactions. The incidence calculation revealed that one of 215 therapeutic users had reactions, compared with one of 13,000 in the prophylaxis group, making the risk of neuropsychiatric reactions after mefloquine treatment 60 times higher than after prophylaxis. Therefore, certain limitations for malaria prophylaxis and treatment with mefloquine are recommended.
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PMID:Neuropsychiatric side effects after the use of mefloquine. 186 51

Seventy-five cases of childhood cerebral malaria (CM) seen within a 30-month period (January 1986 to June 1988) in the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital (UCTH), Calabar, Nigeria were prospectively studied. Fifty-five percent of the victims were aged 1-5 years while 39% were between 6 and 10 years. Eight percent of the cases were postmortem surprises, their condition having been masked by other complications of malaria. At variance with the accepted definition of CM, 20% of the patients neither convulsed nor lost consciousness. In searching for any delineating premortem features of the disease, a combination of fever, multiple seizures, coma with severe anaemia did appear impressive and also a co-existence of tonic-clonic with pure tonic seizures was highly suspicious. The need to heighten the index of suspicion and encourage extensive research into this lethal aspect of malaria is stressed.
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PMID:Preliminary observations on cerebral malaria in Nigerian children. 239 Sep 56

Mammalian plasma contains a high-affinity actin-binding protein, plasma gelsolin, that severs actin filaments. Destruction of erythrocytes could result in the release of erythrocyte cytoskeletal actin into the plasma where it could bind to gelsolin. If the clearance of actin-gelsolin complexes exceeds its synthesis, lowering of the plasma gelsolin concentration might follow. To test this hypothesis, we measured plasma gelsolin levels in patients with falciparum malaria, a disease where at least part of the hemolysis takes place in the intravascular space and that is usually not accompanied by dysfunction of other organs. Two functional gelsolin assays showed that the mean plasma gelsolin concentration of 18 Nigerian children with Plasmodium falciparum malaria was less than 50% (P less than .001) of healthy Nigerian control subjects tested at the same time. Patients with pneumonia and febrile seizures also had depressed gelsolin levels, which indicates that factors other than hemolysis can lower gelsolin concentrations. Gelsolin levels were measured in 11 patients from The Gambia with P falciparum malaria before and approximately 3 weeks after treatment. In all cases the gelsolin level increased after treatment. To confirm the hypothesis that hemolysis can result in a lowering of plasma gelsolin levels, hemolysis was induced in rabbits, either acutely (by the injection of human serum) or subacutely (by the administration of phenylhydrazine). A fall in plasma gelsolin levels was seen, the rate of fall differing with the extent of hemolysis. Affinity adsorption of plasma from animals undergoing acute hemolysis with Sepharose beads coupled to the actin-binding protein DNase I, followed by immunoblotting of adherent proteins with antiactin antiserum demonstrated the presence of actin in circulating rabbit plasma. These studies suggest that under some conditions components of the red cell cytoskeleton are exposed to plasma proteins and that accelerated clearance of actin-gelsolin complexes may explain in part the depressed plasma gelsolin levels seen in patients with falciparum malaria.
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PMID:Decreased plasma gelsolin levels in patients with Plasmodium falciparum malaria: a consequence of hemolysis? 283 53


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