Differentiating the pathologies of cerebral malaria by postmortem parasite counts

To study the pathogenesis of fatal cerebral malaria, we conducted autopsies in 31 children with this clinical diagnosis. We found that 23% of the children had actually died from other causes. The remaining patients had parasites sequestered in cerebral capillaries, and 75% of those had additional in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature medicine 2004-02, Vol.10 (2), p.143-145
Hauptverfasser: Taylor, Terrie E, Fu, Wenjiang J, Carr, Richard A, Whitten, Richard O, Mueller, Jeffrey G, Fosiko, Nedson G, Lewallen, Susan, Liomba, N George, Molyneux, Malcolm E
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To study the pathogenesis of fatal cerebral malaria, we conducted autopsies in 31 children with this clinical diagnosis. We found that 23% of the children had actually died from other causes. The remaining patients had parasites sequestered in cerebral capillaries, and 75% of those had additional intra- and perivascular pathology. Retinopathy was the only clinical sign distinguishing malarial from nonmalarial coma. These data have implications for treating malaria patients, designing clinical trials and assessing malaria-specific disease associations.
ISSN:1078-8956
1546-170X
DOI:10.1038/nm986