| Literature DB >> 26580323 |
Gretchen L Birbeck1,2, Ana-Claire Meyer3,4, Adesola Ogunniyi5.
Abstract
The resiliency of the adult nervous system is markedly affected by the environment and the circumstances during infant and child development. As such, adults in resource-limited settings who may have experienced early deprivation are particularly vulnerable to subsequent neurological disorders. Adult populations in countries with relatively recent advances in economic development may still have a higher susceptibility to neurological illness or injury that is reflective of the socioeconomic environment that was present during that population's infancy and childhood. Brain and peripheral nervous system research conducted over the past decade in resource-limited settings has led to an impressive and growing body of knowledge that informs our understanding of neurological function and dysfunction, independent of geography. Neurological conditions feature prominently in the burgeoning epidemic of non-communicable diseases facing low- and middle-income countries. Neurological research in these countries is needed to address this burden of disease. Although the burden of more prevalent and severe neurological disease poses public health and clinical challenges in settings with limited neurological expertise, the same factors, along with genetic heterogeneity and the relative absence of ingrained clinical care practices, offer circumstances well-suited for the conduct of crucial future research that is globally relevant.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26580323 PMCID: PMC5845480 DOI: 10.1038/nature16031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962
Research priorities to address the neurological burden of disease in low- and middle-income countries
| Priorities | Example | Potential approach |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Implementation studies of interventions or programmes found to have efficacy or be effective on a small scale | • Screening and treatment for depression and anxiety among people with, or mothers of those with, epilepsy | • Scale up of developed programmes with multifaceted, community-based assessments |
| Intersection of neurological NCDs and infectious and/or MCH conditions that remain problematic in LMICs | • Stroke, epilepsy, cognitive impairment in people living with HIV/AIDS | • Accessing populations for study through established HIV services |
| Maximize use of existing data | • Further elucidate the burden of neurological diseases within the framework needed for health-service delivery, treatment and secondary prevention | • Re-framing of GBD 2010 data to quantify relative burden of neurological disorders as manifested rather than as viewed through the root cause |
| Study new disorders that may offer opportunities to gain understanding of mechanisms for neurological disease or injury that are more broadly relevant | • Nodding syndrome and konzo | • Requires collaborations with clinicians, epidemiologists and basic scientists |
| Clinical trials of potentially affordable interventions informed by insights gained in high-income setting and aimed at improving neurological outcomes | • Avoidance of hyperthermia after neurological injury informed by post-arrest and post-HIE cooling protocols | • Pragmatic clinical trials |
GBD, global burden of disease; HIE, hypoxic ischemia encephalopathy; LMICs, low- and middle-income countries; MCH, maternal and child health; NCDs, non-communicable diseases