نتایج جستجو برای: cerebral malaria

تعداد نتایج: 226753  

2014
Nicholas H. Hunt Helen J. Ball Anna M. Hansen Loke T. Khaw Jintao Guo Supun Bakmiwewa Andrew J. Mitchell Valéry Combes Georges E. R. Grau

There are two theories that seek to explain the pathogenesis of cerebral malaria, the mechanical obstruction hypothesis and the immunopathology hypothesis. Evidence consistent with both ideas has accumulated from studies of the human disease and experimental models. Thus, some combination of these concepts seems necessary to explain the very complex pattern of changes seen in cerebral malaria. ...

2017
Frank Lennartz Yvonne Adams Anja Bengtsson Rebecca W. Olsen Louise Turner Nicaise T. Ndam Gertrude Ecklu-Mensah Azizath Moussiliou Michael F. Ofori Benoit Gamain John P. Lusingu Jens E.V. Petersen Christian W. Wang Sofia Nunes-Silva Jakob S. Jespersen Clinton K.Y. Lau Thor G. Theander Thomas Lavstsen Lars Hviid Matthew K. Higgins Anja T.R. Jensen

Cerebral malaria is a deadly outcome of infection by Plasmodium falciparum, occurring when parasite-infected erythrocytes accumulate in the brain. These erythrocytes display parasite proteins of the PfEMP1 family that bind various endothelial receptors. Despite the importance of cerebral malaria, a binding phenotype linked to its symptoms has not been identified. Here, we used structural biolog...

Journal: :Journal of tropical pediatrics 2016
Santosh Kumar Rathia Jhuma Sankar Devasenathipathy Kandasamy Rakesh Lodha

Cerebral malaria is a well-known complication of Plasmodium falciparum malaria. Over recent years, however, Plasmodium vivax also has been reported to cause cerebral malaria with or without co-infection with P. falciparum Here, we report a boy aged 10 years presenting with acute febrile encephalopathy with raised intracranial pressure to the emergency, who was later diagnosed to have P. vivax m...

2003
Katharina Willimann Hugues Matile Niklaus A. Weiss Beat A. Imhof

Cerebral malaria is a fatal complication of infection by Plasmodiumfakiparum in man. The neurological symptoms that characterize this form of malarial disease are accompanied by the adhesion of infected erythrocytes to the vasculature of the brain. To study this phenomenon in vivo, an acute phase severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) mouse model was developed in which sequestration of P.fakip...

Journal: :The Journal of infectious diseases 2012
Mark J Ponsford Isabelle M Medana Panote Prapansilp Tran Tinh Hien Sue J Lee Arjen M Dondorp Margaret M Esiri Nicholas P J Day Nicholas J White Gareth D H Turner

The pathogenesis of coma in severe Plasmodium falciparum malaria remains poorly understood. Obstruction of the brain microvasculature because of sequestration of parasitized red blood cells (pRBCs) represents one mechanism that could contribute to coma in cerebral malaria. Quantitative postmortem microscopy of brain sections from Vietnamese adults dying of malaria confirmed that sequestration i...

Journal: :Journal of vector borne diseases 2012
Shubhakaran

Sir, I read an interesting case report entitled, “Expressive aphasia: An isolated and reversible copmlication of cerebral malaria in a child” published in June 2012 issue of our esteemed journal (J Vector Borne Dis 49(2); p. 117– 8) by Maini and colleagues. It is worth appreciation as authors have pointed out that “there is paucity of literature on post-cerebral malaria expressive aphasia in ch...

Journal: :The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene 2006
Nicholas A V Beare Terrie E Taylor Simon P Harding Susan Lewallen Malcolm E Molyneux

Severe malaria is commonly misdiagnosed in Africa, leading to a failure to treat other life-threatening illnesses. In malaria-endemic areas, parasitemia does not ensure a diagnosis of severe malaria because parasitemia can be incidental to other concurrent disease. The detection of malarial retinopathy is a candidate diagnostic test for cerebral malaria. Malarial retinopathy consists of a set o...

Journal: :The new microbiologica 2017
Novella Carannante Marco Rossi Fiorentino Fraganza Grazia Coppola Daniela Chiesa Vittorio Attanasio Francesco Sbrana Antonio Corcione Carlo Tascini

Most clinicians in developed countries have limited experience in making clinical assessments of malaria disease severity and/or monitoring high-level parasitemia in febrile patients with imported malaria. Hyperparasitemia is a risk factor for severe P. falciparum malaria, and procalcitonin (PCT) has recently been related to the severity of malaria. In developed countries, where not all hospita...

Journal: :The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene 2003
Kirsten E Lyke Dapa A Diallo Alassane Dicko Abdoulaye Kone Drissa Coulibaly Ando Guindo Yacouba Cissoko Lansana Sangare Seydou Coulibaly Blaise Dakouo Terrie E Taylor Ogobara K Doumbo Christopher V Plowe

Peripheral parasite density of Plasmodium falciparum is used as an indicator of malaria disease severity, but does not quantify central sequestration, which is important in the pathogenesis of severe disease. Malaria pigment, recognizable within the cytoplasm of phagocytic cells by light microscopy may represent a peripheral marker for parasite biomass. One hundred seventy-two index cases of se...

Journal: :Thrombosis and haemostasis 2005
Paco Pino Zacharie Taoufiq Josiane Nitcheu Ioanis Vouldoukis Dominique Mazier

Cerebral malaria, one of the most serious complications of Plasmodium falciparum infection, is characterized by the sequestration of parasitized red blood cells (PRBCs) in cerebral microvascular beds. The precise mechanisms involved in the onset of neuropathology remain unknown, but parasite sequestration in the brain, metabolic disturbances, and host immune responses all play a role. Sequestra...

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