| Literature DB >> 23906771 |
Kunal Jain1, Sumeet Sood, K Gowthamarajan.
Abstract
Cerebral malaria is the most severe and rapidly fatal neurological complication of Plasmodium falciparum infection and responsible for more than two million deaths annually. The current therapy is inadequate in terms of reducing mortality or post-treatment symptoms such as neurological and cognitive deficits. The pathophysiology of cerebral malaria is quite complex and offers a variety of targets which remain to be exploited for better therapeutic outcome. The present review discusses on the pathophysiology of cerebral malaria with particular emphasis on scope and promises of curcumin as an adjunctive therapy to improve survival and overcome neurological deficits.Entities:
Keywords: Adjunctive; Cerebral malaria; Cognitive deficit; Curcumin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23906771 PMCID: PMC9425129 DOI: 10.1016/j.bjid.2013.03.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Braz J Infect Dis ISSN: 1413-8670 Impact factor: 3.257
Treatment of cerebral malaria.
| Drug | Route | Indicated for | Loading dose | Maintenance dose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quinine dihydrochloride | IV | Children and adults | 20 mg/kg over 2–4 h (max 600 mg) | 10 mg/kg every 8 h, until able to take orally |
| Quinine dihydrochloride | IV | Children | 15–20 mg/kg over 2–4 h | 10 mg/kg every 12 h, until able to take orally |
| Quinine dihydrochloride | IM | Children and adults | 20 mg/kg (dilute iv formulation to 60 mg/mL) given in two injection sites (anterior thigh) | 10 mg/kg every 8–12 h until able to take orally |
| Quinidine gluconate | IV | Children and adults | 10 mg/kg in normal saline over 1–2 h | 0.02 mg/kg/min continuous infusion with ECG monitoring up to 72 h or 10 mg/kg every 8–12 h |
| Artemether | IM | Children and adults | 3.2 mg/kg | 1.6 mg/kg/day for a minimum of 5 days |
| Artesunate | IM/IV | Children and adults | 2.4 mg/kg | 1.2 mg/kg after 12 and 24 h, then 1.2 mg/kg/day for 7 days; change to oral route when possible |
Clinical management of severe manifestations and complications of P. falciparum malaria.
| Complication | Management |
|---|---|
| Coma (cerebral malaria) | Maintain airway, place patient on his or her side, exclude other treatable causes of coma (hypoglycemia, bacterial meningitis), avoid harmful ancillary treatment such as corticosteroids, heparin and adrenaline |
| Convulsions | Maintain airways; treat with intravenous or rectal diazepam |
| Hypoglycemia | Measure blood glucose and maintain glucose level with infusion |
| Anemia | Transfuse with screened fresh whole blood |
| Hyperpyrexia | Use tepid sponging, fanning and antipyretic drugs. Paracetamol is preferred over other NSAIDs |
| Acute pulmonary edema | Patient should be laid at an angle of 45°, give oxygen and diuretics; prevent excessive rehydration and stop iv fluids |
| Acute renal failure | Exclude dehydration; check fluid balance and urinary sodium; hemofilteration or hemodialysis to be carried out if necessary (e.g. in renal failure) |
| Bleeding and intravascular coagulation | Transfuse with fresh screened whole blood, give vitamin K |
| Metabolic acidosis | Exclude or treat hypoglycemia, hypovolemia and gram negative septicaemia |
| Shock | Suspect septicaemia, take blood for cultures, give parenteral antimicrobials, correct hemodynamic disturbances |
Fig. 1The blood–brain barrier (BBB) breakdown during cerebral malaria pathogenesis. The diagram shows the events and the possible mechanisms that play a vital role in CM. The mature forms (trophozoites and schizonts) of parasitized red blood cells (PRBCs), host leukocytes and platelet-fibrin thrombi adhere to the cerebral endothelial cells and sequester in large numbers in the brain. This cytoadherence, combined with other events such as rosetting, auto-agglutination, clumping and decreased RBCs and PRBCs deformability causes altered blood flow leading to impaired tissue perfusion and hypoxia. Further, sequestered parasites produce local toxins which lead to recruitment of leukocytes and platelets followed by the release of inflammatory cytokines (IL-1, IL-6, TNF, LT, and NO) and microparticles. These mediators lead to endothelial cells activation and apoptosis, BBB breakdown, increased junctional permeability, followed by secondary neuropathological events that can lead to cerebral edema or coma. Sequestration of PRBCs within microvasculature increases cerebral volume, which together with increased cerebral blood flow from seizures, anemia and hyperthermia and altered BBB function lead to cerebral edema and raised intracranial pressure. This may result in death or neuronal damage with consequent neurocognitive sequelae in the survivors.
Adjunctive therapy in cerebral malaria.
| Failure | Not proved | Proposed |
|---|---|---|
| Aspirin | Heparin | Fasudil |
| Desferroxamine | Atorvastatin | |
| Dexamethasone | Pentoxyfylline | Curcumin |
| Immunoglobulins | Levamisole | |
| N-acetylcysteine | Pf-EMP-1 Antagonists |
Fig. 2Structure of curcuminoids.
Fig. 3Molecular targets of curcumin in cerebral malaria.
Curcumin examined for possible effects on animal models of malaria.
| Mouse | Treatment schedule | Treatment effect | Ref. | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dose | Days p.i. | Method | |||
| Albino mice ( | Curcuminoids liposomes | 0–3 | IV | For 10–20 mg/kg group, 60–70% parasitemia on day 6, died by 7–8 days. | |
| Swiss mice ( | Curcumin 100 mg/kg for 5 days | 0–2 | Oral | Curcumin treatment resulted in overall survival rate of 29% compared to 0% in vehicle fed animals 21 days p.i., decreased blood parasitemia by 80–90%. | |
| Swiss mice ( | Curcumin loaded chitosan nanoparticles 33.33 mg/kg | 3–10 | Oral | Curcumin bound chitosan nanoparticles prolonged survival up to 15 days p.i. in comparison to day 9 of p.i. in control mice. | |
| Albino mice ( | Curcuminoid loaded SLN, NLC 100 mg/kg | – | IP | Mice treated with drug loaded SLN and NLC showed significantly 2 fold longer survival as compared to control and free curcuminoids. All groups showed 100% mortality at the end of study. | |
| ICR Harlam-Sprague Dawley and C57BL/6 mice ( | 50 mg/kg twice a day | 0–5 | IP/Gavage | IP injection of 25 mg/kg/d Curcumin on day 1–9 p.i. was beneficial in case of PbA GFP infection in ICR mice; no effect was seen in case of PbA/ICR infection. | |