Retinopathy-positive cerebral malaria is associated with greater inflammation, blood-brain barrier breakdown, and neuronal damage than retinopathy-negative cerebral malaria

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Abstract

Background. Our prior study findings suggest that Plasmodium falciparum is the cause of disease in both malaria retinopathy-positive (RP) and most retinopathy-negative (RN) cerebral malaria (CM), and that absence of retinopathy and decreased disease severity in RN CM may be due to shorter duration of illness, lower parasite biomass, and decreased var gene expression in RN compared to RP CM. In the present study, we assessed the pathophysiology of RP and RN CM. Methods. We compared markers of systemic and central nervous system inflammation, oxidative stress, neuronal injury, systemic endothelial activation, angiogenesis, and platelet activation in Ugandan children with RP (n = 167) or RN (n = 87) CM. Results. RP children had higher plasma C-reactive protein (P =.013), ferritin and erythropoietin (both P

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Villaverde, C., Namazzi, R., Shabani, E., Park, G. S., Datta, D., Hanisch, B., … John, C. C. (2020). Retinopathy-positive cerebral malaria is associated with greater inflammation, blood-brain barrier breakdown, and neuronal damage than retinopathy-negative cerebral malaria. Journal of the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society, 9(5), 580–586. https://doi.org/10.1093/JPIDS/PIZ082

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