| Literature DB >> 26580325 |
Chandy C John1, Hélène Carabin2, Silvia M Montano3, Paul Bangirana4, Joseph R Zunt5, Phillip K Peterson6.
Abstract
Infections that cause significant nervous system morbidity globally include viral (for example, HIV, rabies, Japanese encephalitis virus, herpes simplex virus, varicella zoster virus, cytomegalovirus, dengue virus and chikungunya virus), bacterial (for example, tuberculosis, syphilis, bacterial meningitis and sepsis), fungal (for example, cryptococcal meningitis) and parasitic (for example, malaria, neurocysticercosis, neuroschistosomiasis and soil-transmitted helminths) infections. The neurological, cognitive, behavioural or mental health problems caused by the infections probably affect millions of children and adults in low- and middle-income countries. However, precise estimates of morbidity are lacking for most infections, and there is limited information on the pathogenesis of nervous system injury in these infections. Key research priorities for infection-related nervous system morbidity include accurate estimates of disease burden; point-of-care assays for infection diagnosis; improved tools for the assessment of neurological, cognitive and mental health impairment; vaccines and other interventions for preventing infections; improved understanding of the pathogenesis of nervous system disease in these infections; more effective methods to treat and prevent nervous system sequelae; operations research to implement known effective interventions; and improved methods of rehabilitation. Research in these areas, accompanied by efforts to implement promising technologies and therapies, could substantially decrease the morbidity and mortality of infections affecting the nervous system in low- and middle-income countries.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26580325 PMCID: PMC4697933 DOI: 10.1038/nature16033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962
Neurocognitive and mental health consequences of major infectious diseases that affect the nervous system.
| Infectious disease | Regions affected | Estimated prevalence or annual incidence of infection | Health consequences | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neurological | Cognitive | Mental health | |||
| Arboviruses | |||||
| Dengue virus | Global, most common in South Asia, Africa and Latin America | 390 million (95% CI, 284-528 million) | • Meningitis, meningoencephalitis, encephalitis, seizures, Guillain-Barré syndrome, neuralgic amyotrophy, hypokalaemic paralysis, and dengue myositis | • Not studied | Case reports of mania and depression |
| Chikungunya virus | Global, most common in South Asia, Africa and Latin America | 33,000-93,000 | • Encephalitis, febrile seizures, meningismus, myelopathy or myeloneuropathy | • Not studied | Not studied |
| Japanese encephalitis | Southeast Asia | 35,000-50,000 | • CNS complications during the acute illness include delirium, seizures, axial rigidity, extrapyramidal signs, cranial nerve palsies, ataxia, paraplegia and segmental sensory disturbances | • Among survivors, 30-50% have significant neurological, cognitive or psychiatric sequelae | Among survivors, 30-50% have significant neurological, cognitive, or psychiatric sequelae |
Rhabdoviruses | |||||
| Rabies | Global, greatest in sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia and Latin America | 60,000 (probably an underestimate) | • Severe encephalitis, which is almost 100% fatal | • Fatal | Fatal |
Herpesviruses | |||||
| HSV encephalitis | Global | Present in all countries where HSV testing has been performed, but no reliable global estimates | • If untreated, as in most LMICs, there is a high fatality rate for HSV-1 (around 70%), lower (around 15%) if treated. Long-term neurological complications occur in around 70% of adult survivors, including seizure disorder and hemiparesis. In one cohort, neurological sequelae occurred in 63% of infections in children, including seizures in 44% and developmental delays in 25% | • In one study of adult survivors, long-term cognitive sequelae included memory impairment (69%) | Personality or behavioural impairment in 45% of adult survivors |
| VZV | Global | No reliable global estimates | • CNS: stroke, meningoencephalitis, myelitis | • Very limited studies with conflicting results | Major depression |
| Congenital cytomegalovirus | Global | 0.6-0.7% of live births in high-income countries and 1-5% of live births in LMICs | • Most common non-hereditary cause of hearing loss in children in the United States | • Symptomatic infection, seen in 10-15% of congenitally infected children, is associated with significant global developmental delay in around 50% of affected children | Behavioural problems |
HIV-related | |||||
| HIV | Global, greatest burden in sub-Saharan Africa and Asia | Annual incidence estimate is 2.3 million (95% CI, 1.9-2.7 million) with 34 million people living with HIV/AIDS worldwide, of whom 23 million live in sub-Saharan Africa and 3.5 million live in Southeast Asia | • HIV associated opportunistic infections, aseptic meningitis, AIDS encephalopathy, Bell's palsy, progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy, primary CNS lymphoma, stroke, transverse myelitis, HIV-associated peripheral neuropathy, inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy, immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome and vacuolar myelopathy | • Asymptomatic neurocognitive impairment, mild neurocognitive disorder and HIV-associated dementia | Delirium, major depression, bipolar disorder (including AIDS mania), schizophrenia, substance abuse or dependence and post-traumatic stress disorder |
| Cryptococcal meningitis | Global, greatest burden in sub-Saharan Africa and Asia | Annual incidence estimate: 957,900 in 2009, approximately 624,700 deaths annually | • Headache, meningismus, intracranial hypertension, mental status changes, focal intracerebral granulomas (cryptococcomas), hydrocephalus (communicating and non-communicating), papilledema, sensorineural deafness, cranial nerve palsies, motor and sensory deficits, cerebellar dysfunction and seizures | • Mimicking of vascular dementia, and reversible dementia | Personality change, confusional psychosis and mania |
| Toxoplasma encephalitis | Global, greatest burden in sub-Saharan Africa and Asia | No reliable global estimates of incidence of toxoplasma encephalitis, but toxoplasma infection is present in 14% of the population in the United States, compared with 23-47% in some European, Latin American and African countries | • Headache, focal neurological deficit, seizures and altered mental status | • Dementia | Schizophrenia and behaviour disorders |
| Neonatal sepsis and meningitis | Global | Annual incidence estimates for south Asia, sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America: neonatal sepsis, 1.7 million (uncertainty estimate, 1.1-2.4 million); neonatal meningitis, 200,000; 95% CI, 21,000-350,000) | • Little data for neonatal sepsis globally, especially among those more than 32 weeks gestation or more than 1,500g | • Limited studies reporting cognitive impairment; developmental delay or learning difficulties are frequent in sepsis (30.0%; IQR, 26.4-44.4%) and meningitis (33.3%; IQR, 26.7-36.8%) | No data |
| Bacterial meningitis | Global | Annual incidence estimate: 1.2 million | • 22.8% (IQR, 12.1-29.2%) have at least 1 neurocognitive sequela at discharge, 19.9% (IQR, 12.1-35.2%) have at least 1 sequela post-discharge; 16.0% (IQR, 7.1-21.2%) have at least 1 major sequela at discharge, 12.8% (iQr, 7.1-21.1%) have at least 1 major sequela post discharge | • In children, cognitive impairment including low IQ, academic limitations, and impared executive function and in adults, cognitive impairment with slower cognitive speed seen | Behavioural changes and emotional disturbance including ADHD and learning difficulties |
| Tuberculous meningitis (also an opportunistic infection in HIV) | Global, most burden in sub-Saharan Africa and Asia | No reliable global incidence estimates; highest in countries with high prevalence of HIV infection | • Neurological sequelae in 53.9% of child survivors (95% CI, 42.6-64.9) | • Cognitive impairment in all areas tested, and poor scholastic progress | Emotional disturbance |
| Neurosyphilis | Global | No reliable global incidence estimates; most cases occur in HIV-positive individuals | • Meningitis, cerebrovascular infarction, and paresis, tabes dorsalis (ataxia, paraesthesia and bladder dysfunction) | • Impaired memory, disorientation and dementia | Dementia, depression, delirium, mania and psychosis |
| Neurocysticercosis | Global, greatest burden in pig-raising areas with poor sanitation | 2010 prevalence estimate: 1.4 million (95% CI, 1.3-1.6 million) (epilepsy only) | • Among people with symptomatic neurocysticercosis diagnosed with brain imaging: seizures and epilepsy (78.8%; 95% CI, 65.1-89.7%), headaches (37.9%; 95% CI, 23.3-53.7%), focal deficits (16.0%; 95% CI, 9.7-23.6%) and symptoms associated with increased intracranial pressure (11.7%; 95% CI, 6.0-18.9%) | • Case reports of cognitive decline | Neurocysticercosis with active cysts: dementia (12.5%) and cognitive impairment, but not dementia (27.5%); psychosis |
| Malaria | Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, Asia and Oceania | Annual incidence estimate: 216 million | • Cerebral malaria: 5-28% of children have neurological deficits on discharge, including epilepsy, acute hemiparesis, hypertonia, cortical blindness and ataxia | • Cerebral malaria affects general cognition, attention, working memory, visual spatial skills, somatosensory discrimination, speech and language, and receptive and expressive language | Cerebral malaria: internalizing and externalizing problems, ADHD, disruptive behaviour, psychosis and depression |
| STH infection | Global, greatest burden in sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia | Estimated 2010 prevalence: hookworm infected 439 million (95% CI, 406-480), | • Not described | • School-aged children: | Children under 5 years of age: social and emotional disturbances (combined with anaemia) |
| Schistosomiasis | Global, greatest in sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia | Estimated 2010 prevalence: 252 million infected | • Acute schistosomal encephalopathy: headache, confusion, seizure, loss of consciousness, focal deficits, visual impairment and ataxia | • For | No data |
ADHD, attention deficit disorder; CI, confidence interval; CNS, central nervous system; HSV, herpes simplex virus; IQR, interquartile range; LMICs, low- and middle-income countries; PNS, peripheral nervous system; STH, soil-transmitted helminths; VZV, varicella-zoster virus. Prevalence estimates are typically used (for example, STH infections and schistosomiasis) because accurate incidence numbers for these infections are difficult to obtain.
Potential areas for intervention in infectious diseases that affect the nervous system.
| Disease | Vaccine available | Control of zoonotic reservoirs | Control of vector populations | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dengue | New dengue vaccines being tested in large field trials | NA | Yes | None available |
| Chikungunya | No | NA | Yes | None available |
| Japanese encephalitis | Yes | No | Yes | None available |
| Rabies | Yes | Yes | NA | None available |
| HSV encephalitis | No | NA | NA | Yes |
| VZV | Yes | NA | NA | Yes |
| Congenital cytomegalovirus | No | NA | NA | Yes |
HIV-related | ||||
| HIV | No | NA | NA | Yes |
| Cryptococcal meningitis | No | NA | NA | Yes |
| Toxoplasma encephalitis | No | Yes | NA | Yes |
| Neonatal sepsis and meningitis | No | NA | NA | Yes |
| Bacterial meningitis | Yes, for | NA | NA | Yes |
| Tuberculous meningitis | Partial protection provided by BCG vaccination | Infrequent (cases due to | NA | Yes |
| Neurosyphilis | No | NA | NA | Yes |
| Neurocysticercosis | No | Porcine vaccine trials underway, pig treatment available | NA | Yes |
| Malaria | RTS,S vaccine had efficacy in phase III studies and other vaccines are being developed | NA except for | Yes | Yes |
| STH | No. Hookworm vaccine is in phase I trials, but is linked to adverse events | NA except for | NA | Yes |
| Schistosomiasis | No, but phase I vaccine trials are ongoing | Bovine vaccine trials underway for | Yes | Yes |
BCG, Bacillus Calmette-Guerin; HSV, herpes simplex virus; NA, not applicable; STH, soil-transmitted helminth; VZV, varicella-zoster virus.
Global research for infections that affect the nervous system.
| Priority area | Research needed |
|---|---|
|
| • Rapid, accurate, low-cost, point-of-care diagnostic tests for infections that affect the nervous system |
|
| • Accurate incidence and prevalence estimates of common infections that affect the nervous system |
|
| • Identification of host response pathways that lead to nervous-system deficits or to clinical immunity |
|
| • Develop safe and effective vaccines based on immunology, epidemiology and pathogenesis studies |
|
| • Effective adjunctive treatment to prevent or decrease nervous-system deficits or disabilities |
|
| • Effective and feasible physical, occupational and cognitive rehabilitation programmes |
|
| • Optimal methods to implement or operationalize interventions with known efficacy |