Atypical brain response to novelty in rural African children with a history of severe falciparum malaria.

Plasmodium falciparum is the most common parasitic infection of the central nervous system causing neuro-cognitive deficits in 5-26% of paediatric cases. The burden cannot be reliably estimated because of lack of sensitive, culture-fair and robust assessments in rural settings. Auditory and visual b...

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Main Authors: Kihara, M, de Haan, M, Garrashi, H, Neville, BG, Newton, C
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2010
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author Kihara, M
de Haan, M
Garrashi, H
Neville, BG
Newton, C
author_facet Kihara, M
de Haan, M
Garrashi, H
Neville, BG
Newton, C
author_sort Kihara, M
collection OXFORD
description Plasmodium falciparum is the most common parasitic infection of the central nervous system causing neuro-cognitive deficits in 5-26% of paediatric cases. The burden cannot be reliably estimated because of lack of sensitive, culture-fair and robust assessments in rural settings. Auditory and visual brain event related potentials (ERPs) are used to compare novelty processing in children exposed to severe malaria with community controls. Fifty children previously admitted and discharged from Kilifi District Hospital with severe falciparum malaria were selected and compared with 77 unexposed age matched children. The results showed that up to 14% of children exposed to severe malaria had significantly different responses to novelty compared to unexposed children. Children exposed to severe malaria had smaller P3a amplitudes to novelty in both auditory [F (3, 119)=4.545, p=0.005] and visual [F (3, 119)=6.708, p<0.001] paradigms compared to unexposed children. In the auditory domain the differences in processing of novelty were not related to early component processing. The percentage of children with severe malaria showing impaired performance using ERPs is within the range previously reported using neuropsychological tests. The overall pattern suggests that severe malaria affects prefrontal and temporal cortices normally activated by stimulus novelty.
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spelling oxford-uuid:71d563de-95f2-4045-805a-47529757ea0b2022-03-26T19:46:10ZAtypical brain response to novelty in rural African children with a history of severe falciparum malaria.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:71d563de-95f2-4045-805a-47529757ea0bEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2010Kihara, Mde Haan, MGarrashi, HNeville, BGNewton, CPlasmodium falciparum is the most common parasitic infection of the central nervous system causing neuro-cognitive deficits in 5-26% of paediatric cases. The burden cannot be reliably estimated because of lack of sensitive, culture-fair and robust assessments in rural settings. Auditory and visual brain event related potentials (ERPs) are used to compare novelty processing in children exposed to severe malaria with community controls. Fifty children previously admitted and discharged from Kilifi District Hospital with severe falciparum malaria were selected and compared with 77 unexposed age matched children. The results showed that up to 14% of children exposed to severe malaria had significantly different responses to novelty compared to unexposed children. Children exposed to severe malaria had smaller P3a amplitudes to novelty in both auditory [F (3, 119)=4.545, p=0.005] and visual [F (3, 119)=6.708, p<0.001] paradigms compared to unexposed children. In the auditory domain the differences in processing of novelty were not related to early component processing. The percentage of children with severe malaria showing impaired performance using ERPs is within the range previously reported using neuropsychological tests. The overall pattern suggests that severe malaria affects prefrontal and temporal cortices normally activated by stimulus novelty.
spellingShingle Kihara, M
de Haan, M
Garrashi, H
Neville, BG
Newton, C
Atypical brain response to novelty in rural African children with a history of severe falciparum malaria.
title Atypical brain response to novelty in rural African children with a history of severe falciparum malaria.
title_full Atypical brain response to novelty in rural African children with a history of severe falciparum malaria.
title_fullStr Atypical brain response to novelty in rural African children with a history of severe falciparum malaria.
title_full_unstemmed Atypical brain response to novelty in rural African children with a history of severe falciparum malaria.
title_short Atypical brain response to novelty in rural African children with a history of severe falciparum malaria.
title_sort atypical brain response to novelty in rural african children with a history of severe falciparum malaria
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