| Literature DB >> 17370529 |
Macpherson Mallewa1, Anthony R Fooks, Daniel Banda, Patrick Chikungwa, Limangeni Mankhambo, Elizabeth Molyneux, Malcolm E Molyneux, Tom Solomon.
Abstract
In a malaria-endemic area of Africa, rabies was an important cause of fatal central nervous system infection, responsible for 14 (10.5%) of 133 cases. Four patients had unusual clinical manifestations, and rabies was only diagnosed postmortem. Three (11.5%) of 26 fatal cases originally attributed to cerebral malaria were due to rabies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17370529 PMCID: PMC2725806 DOI: 10.3201/eid1301.060810
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Clinical and diagnostic features of 14 patients for whom the ultimate diagnosis was rabies encephalitis*
| Patient no (sex/age,y) | Clinical features | History of animal exposure | Admission coma score† | Malaria slide‡ | Clinical diagnosis | Time to death | Postmortem positive results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 (F/13) | Fever and confusion for 2 d; convulsions, hypersalivation, hydrophobia, aerophobia | Uncertain | 13/15 | Neg | Rabies | 24 h | ND |
| 2 (M/13) | Hallucinations, confusion, for 2 d; thought had "been bewitched"; pyrexia, neck stiffness, drooling hydrophobia, aerophobia | Possible dog bite 6 mo earlier | 12/15 | Neg | Rabies | 12 h | ND |
| 3 (M/6) | Fever for 2 d, convulsions for 1 d; agitated, hydrophobia, aerophobia | Dog bite 3 mo earlier | 3/5 | Pos (1+) | Rabies | 4 d | ND |
| 4 (M/7) | Fever for 2 d, confusion, drooling, hydrophobia, aerophobia | Dog bite 3 mo earlier | 4/5 | Neg | Rabies | 24 h | ND |
| 5 (M/8) | Fever for 2 d, convulsions; confused; rapid deterioration | None§ | 4/5 | Pos (2+) | Cerebral malaria | 3 d | FAT, PCR, MIT |
| 6 (M/7) | Headache, fever for 3 d, weak, confused; mild neck stiffness, reduced tone, reflexes; CSF 8 leukocytes /mm3, protein 40 mg/dL, glucose 4.8 mmol/L; venous glucose 5.5 mmol/L; deteriorated over 10 d | Cat scratch 3 mo earlier | 2/5 | Pos (1+) | Cerebral malaria | 10 d | FAT,¶ PCR, MIT |
| 7 (M/6) | Fever for 1 d, convulsions; neck stiffness, hydrophobia, aerophobia | Dog bite 2 mo earlier | 3/5 | Pos (2+) | Rabies | <6 h | ND |
| 8 (M/13) | Restlessness, hypersalivation, hematemesis for 1 d; confused, hydrophobia, aerophobia | Dog bite 3 mo earlier | 13/15 | Neg | Rabies | <6 h | ND |
| 9 (F/11) | Fever, restlessness for 1 d; agitated, hydrophobia, aerophobia | Dog bite, 1 mo earlier | 14/15 | Neg | Rabies | 4 d | FAT, PCR, MIT |
| 10 (M/7) | Fever confusion for 1 d, hallucination, “bewitched”, hypersalivation, confusion, hydrophobia, aerophobia | Dog bite 2 mo earlier | 1/5 | Neg | Rabies | 24 h | FAT, PCR, RTCIT |
| 11 (F/6) | Fever convulsions for 1 d; status epilepticus, hypotonia, areflexia developed; diffuse slow waves on EEG | None§ | 1/5 | Pos (2+) | Cerebral malaria | <6 h | PCR |
| 12 (M/12) | Fell off bike, head injury, no loss of consciousness; ataxia and confusion developed; neck stiffness, fever; CSF 65 leukocytes/mm3 (70% PMN cells) protein 30 mg/dL, glucose 4.2 mmol/L | None§ | 14/15 | Neg | Meningitis | 3 d | FAT, PCR, MIT |
| 13 (M/7) | Fever for 2 d, convulsion, reduced conscious; agitated, convulsions, hydrophobia, aerophobia | Dog bite 6 wk earlier | 2/5 | Neg | Rabies | 24 h | ND |
| 14 (M/6) | Fever for 2 d, vomiting 1 d, no convulsions; confused, hydrophobia, aerophobia | Dog bite 2 mo earlier | 4/5 | Neg | Rabies | 24 h | ND |
*Neg, negative; Pos, positive; ND, not done; FAT, fluorescent antibody test; PCR, reverse transcriptase–PCR; MIT, mouse inoculation test; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; RTCIT, rabies tissue culture inoculation test; EEG, electroencephalogram; PMN, polymorphonuclear. †Glasgow coma score /15 or Blantyre coma score /5. ‡Plasmodium falciparum parasitemia, graded according to the number of parasitized red blood cells per high-powered field (HPF) 1+= 1–100/100 HPF, 2+ = 1–9/10 HPF, 3+ = 1–9 per field, 4+ = >10/HPF) (). §For patients 5, 11, and 12, a possible exposure history was elicited after the diagnosis of rabies encephalitis became apparent. Patient 5 had been scratched by a dog 6 wks earlier, but it had not appeared rabid; patient 11 had been bitten by a neighbor’s dog 6 mo before admission, although this animal had been vaccinated against rabies, and remained well; patient 12 had been bitten by a neighbor’s dog 4 mo earlier, the dog remained well, although another dog had died after apparently “choking on a rat” (rabid dogs often appear to have something stuck in their throat). ¶Patient 6 CSF was negative for rabies virus by FAT at the Veterinary Laboratories Agency Weybridge but positive when tested in Malawi.
FigurePhylogenetic tree, based on 400 nucleotides of the nucleoprotein gene (), showing the relationship between rabies virus isolates in this study from humans (in boldface) and animals (underlined), and other representative isolates; GenBank accession nos. are in brackets. Bootstrap values >70% are considered significant and are included within the figure. The Africa 1, 2, 3, and 4 genotypes are within rabies virus genotype 1 ().