| Literature DB >> 27005304 |
Robert Colebunders1,2, Adam Hendy3, John L Mokili4, Joseph Francis Wamala5, Joice Kaducu6, Lucia Kur7, Floribert Tepage8, Michel Mandro9, Gisele Mucinya10, Germain Mambandu11, Michel Yendema Komba12, Jean Louis Lumaliza13, Marieke van Oijen14,15, Anne Laudisoit14,16.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Nodding syndrome (NS) is an epilepsy disorder occurring in children in South Sudan, northern Uganda and Tanzania. The etiology of NS is unknown, but epidemiological studies demonstrate an association between NS and onchocerciasis.Entities:
Keywords: Africa; Blackflies; Epilepsy; Nodding syndrome; Onchocerca; Simulium
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27005304 PMCID: PMC4802870 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-016-1993-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
State of epilepsy in onchocerciasis endemic regions visited
| Northern Uganda: Gulu, Kitgum, Pader and Lamwo districts | South Sudan: Western Equatoria State | Democratic Republic of the Congo: Bas-Uélé, Orientale Province | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Year of first NS cases | NS cases reported since 2000 [ | NS cases reported since 1990 [ | Unknown |
| Tribes | Acholi | Moro and dinka | Bowa, Zande, Lokele, Kango and others |
| Migration | IDP camps during civil war | IDP camps and “hiding in the forest” during civil war | No important migration, but some “hiding in the forest” during conflicts |
| Prevalence of all forms of epilepsy | 2.9 % (Moyo, Adjumani, Kitgum and Gulu districts, 2010)a | 9 % (Mvolo, 2013) | 2.3 % (Titule, 2014) [ |
| Prevalence of NS | 0.68 % probable NS cases among children aged 5–18 years in three districts, 2012–2013 [ | Exact prevalence never assessed but high based on high epilepsy prevalence | No confirmed NS according to WHO case definition, but NS-like suspected cases reported in the region |
| Stunted growth with lack of secondary sexual characteristics | Present, exact prevalence not reported | Present, not frequent | |
| Nutritional status | Often poor [ | Often poor [ | Generally good |
| Availability of anti- epileptic drugs | Sodium valproate, carbamazepine and phenytoin | Generally not available | Phenobarbital available but often not affordable |
| Epidemiological situation of NS/epilepsy | NS/epilepsy epidemic until 2013 [ | Ongoing NS/epilepsy epidemic | Endemic epilepsy |
| Incidence of NS/epilepsy | Very limited new cases of NS [ | Still new NS/epilepsy cases | Stable incidence of new epilepsy cases |
| Ivermectin distribution | Twice a year | Once a year, low coverage | Once a year |
| Prevalence of onchocerciasis | Decreasing | Not known | Decreasing |
| Loa Loa endemic region | No | No | Yes |
| Insecticide/larvicide use | Before 1972 and since 2012 [ | Only before 1972 | Never |
| General ecology | Savannah forest | Tropical forest | |
| Location of villages | Close to rapid flowing blackfly-breeding rivers | ||
NS nodding syndrome, IDP internally displaced persons
a JK personnal communication, unpublished
Proposed clinical case definition for “onchocerciasis associated epilepsy” (“river epilepsy”)
| Major criteria |
| A previously healthy person in an onchocerciasis endemic area who develops head-nodding or convulsive epilepsy of unknown etiology between the ages 3 and 18 |
| Minor criteria |
| Other neurological abnormalities (cognitive decline, school dropout due to cognitive/behavioral problems, psychiatric manifestations, other neurological abnormalities) |