Retinal findings predictive of outcome in cerebral malaria.

The pathogenesis of cerebral malaria is poorly understood. Direct and indirect ophthalmoscope examinations of 141 Malawian children with strictly defined cerebral malaria revealed 2 distinct and prognostically significant findings: papilloedema and extramacular retinal oedema. The relative risk of d...

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Main Authors: Lewallen, S, Bakker, H, Taylor, T, Wills, B, Courtright, P, Molyneux, M
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 1996
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author Lewallen, S
Bakker, H
Taylor, T
Wills, B
Courtright, P
Molyneux, M
author_facet Lewallen, S
Bakker, H
Taylor, T
Wills, B
Courtright, P
Molyneux, M
author_sort Lewallen, S
collection OXFORD
description The pathogenesis of cerebral malaria is poorly understood. Direct and indirect ophthalmoscope examinations of 141 Malawian children with strictly defined cerebral malaria revealed 2 distinct and prognostically significant findings: papilloedema and extramacular retinal oedema. The relative risk of death in patients with papilloedema was 6.7 times that in patients without papilloedema. Extramacular retinal oedema was associated with a 2.9 fold increase in the relative risk of dying. The mortality rate in patients with neither of these signs was only 1.3% compared to an overall mortality rate of 9.2%. The clinical and laboratory features associated with each of these ophthalmological findings were different, suggesting that there may be at least 2 different pathogenetic processes in patients with cerebral malaria.
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spelling oxford-uuid:c4e7fe6b-f09c-4ddc-82a8-f69e4d32d19a2022-03-27T06:27:01ZRetinal findings predictive of outcome in cerebral malaria.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:c4e7fe6b-f09c-4ddc-82a8-f69e4d32d19aEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford1996Lewallen, SBakker, HTaylor, TWills, BCourtright, PMolyneux, MThe pathogenesis of cerebral malaria is poorly understood. Direct and indirect ophthalmoscope examinations of 141 Malawian children with strictly defined cerebral malaria revealed 2 distinct and prognostically significant findings: papilloedema and extramacular retinal oedema. The relative risk of death in patients with papilloedema was 6.7 times that in patients without papilloedema. Extramacular retinal oedema was associated with a 2.9 fold increase in the relative risk of dying. The mortality rate in patients with neither of these signs was only 1.3% compared to an overall mortality rate of 9.2%. The clinical and laboratory features associated with each of these ophthalmological findings were different, suggesting that there may be at least 2 different pathogenetic processes in patients with cerebral malaria.
spellingShingle Lewallen, S
Bakker, H
Taylor, T
Wills, B
Courtright, P
Molyneux, M
Retinal findings predictive of outcome in cerebral malaria.
title Retinal findings predictive of outcome in cerebral malaria.
title_full Retinal findings predictive of outcome in cerebral malaria.
title_fullStr Retinal findings predictive of outcome in cerebral malaria.
title_full_unstemmed Retinal findings predictive of outcome in cerebral malaria.
title_short Retinal findings predictive of outcome in cerebral malaria.
title_sort retinal findings predictive of outcome in cerebral malaria
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AT bakkerh retinalfindingspredictiveofoutcomeincerebralmalaria
AT taylort retinalfindingspredictiveofoutcomeincerebralmalaria
AT willsb retinalfindingspredictiveofoutcomeincerebralmalaria
AT courtrightp retinalfindingspredictiveofoutcomeincerebralmalaria
AT molyneuxm retinalfindingspredictiveofoutcomeincerebralmalaria