Neurologic outcomes in retinopathy-negative cerebral malaria survivors
- PMID: 22914840
- PMCID: PMC3440452
- DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0b013e31826aacd4
Neurologic outcomes in retinopathy-negative cerebral malaria survivors
Abstract
Objectives: Patients surviving retinopathy-positive cerebral malaria (CM) are at high risk for the development of epilepsy, developmental disabilities, and behavioral abnormalities. We aimed to establish whether retinopathy-negative CM is also a risk factor for these outcomes.
Methods: Between 2005 and 2007, survivors of CM and concurrently hospitalized controls in Blantyre, Malawi, were followed to assess the development of neurologic abnormalities. At discharge and every 3 months thereafter, incident cases of epilepsy and developmental disabilities were ascertained using screening questionnaires and confirmatory neurologic examinations. Incident cases of epilepsy and developmental disabilities were compared in retinopathy-negative CM survivors to controls and retinopathy-positive CM survivors.
Results: Thirty-five retinopathy-negative CM survivors were enrolled. Their neurologic outcomes were compared to 132 retinopathy-positive CM survivors and 272 controls. Compared to survivors of retinopathy-positive CM, children without malaria retinopathy have an equal odds of adverse neurologic outcome (odds ratio [OR] = 1.0, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.4-2.2). Eleven of 35 survivors of retinopathy-negative CM had at least 1 adverse neurologic outcome compared to 2 of 272 controls (OR 61.9, 95% CI 13.0-295.5). In retinopathy-negative CM survivors, a Blantyre Coma Scale score ≤ 1 on admission was associated with an adverse outcome.
Conclusions: Compared with controls, children surviving either retinopathy-negative or -positive CM are at similar high risk for adverse neurologic outcomes. Studies to evaluate preventive and therapeutic strategies in children with both retinopathy-negative and -positive CM are needed to improve mortality, morbidity, or both.
Comment in
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  Retinopathy in cerebral malaria: new answers, new puzzles.Neurology. 2012 Sep 18;79(12):1196-7. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0b013e31826aad9d. Epub 2012 Aug 22. Neurology. 2012. PMID: 22914837 No abstract available.
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