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Re-evaluating malarial retinopathy to improve its diagnostic accuracy in cerebral malaria
Wilson KJ +7 more
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Current Tropical Medicine Reports, 2021
Malaria is the most important parasitic disease of humankind. Cerebral malaria is malaria’s deadliest clinical manifestation and has a profound public health impact in endemic areas. In Africa, it is primarily a disease of childhood. Here we review recent updates in research into cerebral malaria pathogenesis, clinical care, treatment, and prevention ...
Geoffrey Guenther +3 more
openaire +2 more sources
Malaria is the most important parasitic disease of humankind. Cerebral malaria is malaria’s deadliest clinical manifestation and has a profound public health impact in endemic areas. In Africa, it is primarily a disease of childhood. Here we review recent updates in research into cerebral malaria pathogenesis, clinical care, treatment, and prevention ...
Geoffrey Guenther +3 more
openaire +2 more sources
Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians, 1977
Cerebral malaria is an unusual and treatable cause of stupor and coma, and it can present suddenly in a healthy person. It is diagnosed by finding parasites on a blood smear and is treated either with chloroquine or with quinine, pyrimethamine, and sulfadiazine.
A C, Broders, H, Dhingra
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Cerebral malaria is an unusual and treatable cause of stupor and coma, and it can present suddenly in a healthy person. It is diagnosed by finding parasites on a blood smear and is treated either with chloroquine or with quinine, pyrimethamine, and sulfadiazine.
A C, Broders, H, Dhingra
openaire +2 more sources
CNS Drugs, 2003
Cerebral malaria is one of the most common nontraumatic encephalopathies in the world. Children living in sub-Saharan Africa bear the brunt of the disease, but cerebral malaria is being seen increasingly in adults throughout the world, including outside malarious areas.
Mturi, N +4 more
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Cerebral malaria is one of the most common nontraumatic encephalopathies in the world. Children living in sub-Saharan Africa bear the brunt of the disease, but cerebral malaria is being seen increasingly in adults throughout the world, including outside malarious areas.
Mturi, N +4 more
openaire +3 more sources
2013
Malaria, the most significant parasitic disease of man, kills approximately one million people per year. Half of these deaths occur in those with cerebral malaria (CM). The World Health Organization (WHO) defines CM as an otherwise unexplained coma in a patient with malarial parasitemia.
Douglas G, Postels, Gretchen L, Birbeck
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Malaria, the most significant parasitic disease of man, kills approximately one million people per year. Half of these deaths occur in those with cerebral malaria (CM). The World Health Organization (WHO) defines CM as an otherwise unexplained coma in a patient with malarial parasitemia.
Douglas G, Postels, Gretchen L, Birbeck
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Archives of Neurology, 1978
Neuropathologic examination of 19 fatal cases of cerebral malaria and a review of the literature showed that the epidemiologic, clinical, and pathologic features of this entity suggest consideration of cerebral malaria as a form of disseminated vasculomyelinopathy, a hyperegic reaction of the CNS to the antigenic challenge of Plasmodium falciparum ...
G, Toro, G, Román
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Neuropathologic examination of 19 fatal cases of cerebral malaria and a review of the literature showed that the epidemiologic, clinical, and pathologic features of this entity suggest consideration of cerebral malaria as a form of disseminated vasculomyelinopathy, a hyperegic reaction of the CNS to the antigenic challenge of Plasmodium falciparum ...
G, Toro, G, Román
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The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1988
Possible factors contributing to the development of cerebral malaria were discussed based on pathological changes in Burmese patients who died of cerebral malaria. Blockage of cerebral capillaries by Plasmodium falciparum infected erythrocytes appeared to be the principal cause of cerebral malaria.
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Possible factors contributing to the development of cerebral malaria were discussed based on pathological changes in Burmese patients who died of cerebral malaria. Blockage of cerebral capillaries by Plasmodium falciparum infected erythrocytes appeared to be the principal cause of cerebral malaria.
openaire +2 more sources

