| Literature DB >> 28182652 |
Kathrin Föger1, Gina Gora-Stahlberg1, James Sejvar2, Emilio Ovuga3, Louise Jilek-Aall4, Erich Schmutzhard5, Christoph Kaiser6, Andrea S Winkler1,7.
Abstract
Nakalanga syndrome is a condition that was described in Uganda and various other African countries decades ago. Its features include growth retardation, physical deformities, endocrine dysfunction, mental impairment, and epilepsy, amongst others. Its cause remains obscure. Nodding syndrome is a neurological disorder with some features in common with Nakalanga syndrome, which has been described mainly in Uganda, South Sudan, and Tanzania. It has been considered an encephalopathy affecting children who, besides head nodding attacks, can also present with stunted growth, delayed puberty, and mental impairment, amongst other symptoms. Despite active research over the last years on the pathogenesis of Nodding syndrome, to date, no convincing single cause of Nodding syndrome has been reported. In this review, by means of a thorough literature search, we compare features of both disorders. We conclude that Nakalanga and Nodding syndromes are closely related and may represent the same condition. Our findings may provide new directions in research on the cause underlying this neurological disorder.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28182652 PMCID: PMC5300103 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0005201
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Fig 1Map of sub-Saharan Africa.
Cases of Nakalanga and Nodding syndrome are reported from onchocerciasis endemic areas throughout West, Central, and East Africa.
Clinical case series and case reports on Nakalanga syndrome: Southeast Uganda 1950–64, Ethiopia 1967, West Uganda 1991–95, Burundi 1995.
| Publication [Reference] | Onchocerciasis | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| at onset | Stunting | Wasting | Pubertal Development | Mental Development | Facial Dysmorphia | Kyphosis Scoliosis | Epileptic Seizures | ||
| Raper and Ladkin [ | n.r. | -4.54 | -6.21 | delay; small genitalia; some cases retarded | not severely impaired; appearance younger | small mandible; protuberant skull; large lips | prone to develop scoliosis | Epilepsy in 2/7 | Positive in all cases |
| Marshall and Cherry [ | n.r. | -5.06 | n.r. | few pubic hair; normal testes, small penis | mentally dull | prognathic jaw; protruding teeth | n.r. | no epilepsy | positive |
| Jeliffe et al. [ | n.r. | -4.80 | -3.53 | reduced sexual activity; poor pubic hair | Mild to moderate apathy; 2/ 5 “mental torpor” | prognatic jaw, forward angulated incisors in 2/ 5 | 2/5 marked kyphosis | epilepsy in 1/5 | Positive in all |
| Bagenda et al. [ | n. r. (0–7)/ 20 (13–25) | -4.72 | n. r. | delay; cases ≥20 y in puberty or postpuberty | 7/ 19 normal life; 10 doing simple jobs; 2 looked after | deep-set eyes; teeth protruding; small chin | 8/19 kyphoscoliosis | epilepsy in 7/19 | Positive in 18/19 |
| Oomen [ | n.r. | -5.74 | cachectic | small genitalia | n.r. | n.r. | kyphoscoliosis | epilepsy | positive |
| Ovuga et al. [ | n.r. | growth arrest | emaciation | poorly developed | 31/91 cognitive impairment; some apathetic | distorted dentition | pigeon chest; kyphosis | epilepsy in 24/91 | Positive in 82/91 |
| Kipp et al. [ | 7 (1–>8)/ 18 (15–32) | -4.9 | -1.9 | 27 of 31 prepubertal, versus 2 of 28 controls | several cases mentally subnormal | n.r. | deformed spine in 8/31 | n. r. | Positive in all |
| Höfer [ | n.r. | -4.02 | -2.53 | delay, in comparison with local controls | 14/36 mentally retarded | 6/36 protruding forehead, flat nasal bridge | Kyphoscoliosis in 6/36 | Epilepsy in 16/36 | Positive in 13/16 |
| Newell et al. [ | n.r. | -4.83 | -1.11 | delay in 2/9 | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. | all with epilepsy | Positive in all |
i median (range)
ii detection of microfilaria of Onchocerca volvulus in skin biopsy, or of antibodies in serology (Newell et al. [12])
iii n.r. = not reported
iv z-score for height-for-age (stunting) and body mass index (BMI) (waisting), referring to 2006 WHO growth standard [40,41]. http://www.who.int/childgrowth/en/
v no quantified information
vi case report
vii overlap of study populations in studies of Ovuga et al. [8], Kipp et al. [9], and Höfer [10]
viii growth arrest as mandatory symptom, defined as <80% of average height of local population; emaciation as characteristic symptom, not specified
ix mean z-score of height-for-age and BMI, referring to 1977 NCHS growth reference [62]. http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/series/sr_11/sr11_165.pdf; Range not reported
Proposed criteria for definition of Nakalanga syndrome compared to criteria for definition of a probable case of Nodding syndrome consented in Kampala 2012 (adapted from ref. [26,33]).
| | |
| 1. Born healthy | 1. Reported head nodding in a previously healthy person |
| 2. Onset in childhood | 2. Age 3–18 y at onset of head nodding |
| 3. No alternative explanatory condition | 3. Nodding frequency 5–20 times/min |
| 4. Plus, one or several symptoms of developmental disturbance: | |
| a) Stunting, growth failure | |
| b) Wasting, emaciation | |
| c) Retardation of sexual development | |
| d) Mental impairment | |
| | |
| 5. Facial dysmorphia: small and protuberant mandible, large lips, protruding front teeth | 4. Other neurological abnormalities (cognitive, school dropout, other seizures, or neurological abnormalities) |
| 6. Kyphoscoliosis | 5. Clustering in space or time with similar cases |
| 7. Epileptic seizures | 6. Delayed sexual or physical development |
| 8. Occurrence of similar cases in the surroundings | 7. Psychiatric manifestations |
Clinical features of Nakalanga syndrome according to the proposed definition found in patients with Nodding syndrome.
| Publication [Reference] | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| At onset of NS / at examination | Stunting | Wasting | Delayed Puberty | Mental Retardation | Facial Dysmorphia | Kyphosis Scoliosis | Epileptic seizures other than head nodding | |
| Lacey [ | n. r. | + | + | n. r. | + | n. r. | n. r. | |
| Nyungera et al. [ | n. r. | + | + | n. r. | + | n. r. | n. r. | |
| Tumwine et al. [ | 12 / 12 | + | + | +4 | + | n. r. | n. r. | |
| De Polo et al. [ | 9 / 12 | n. r. | n. r. | n. r. | all, different degree | n. r. | n. r. | all |
| Idro et al. [ | 6 / 14 | 9/22 cases | 16/22 cases | n. r. | 10/22 severely impaired | 5/22 unspecified lip changes | 1/22 kyphosis | 18/22 cases |
| Sejvar et al. [ | 8 / 12 | n. r. | n. r. | n. r. | test score of cases lower than controls | n. r. | n. r. | 6/23 cases |
| Kitara et al.[ | 11 / 13 | n. r. | n. r. | school failure | n. r. | n. r. | ||
| Piloya-Were et al. [ | 7 / 15 | -2.41 | n. r. | obvious delay | n. r. | n. r. | n. r. | 5/8 cases |
| Winkler et al. [ | n.r. | n. r. | n. r. | n. r. | 12/62 impaired | n. r. | n. r. | 34/62 cases |
| Spencer et al. [ | 10 / 13 | 11/33 with small stature | 18/33 poorly nourished | n. r. | 8/33 impaired | n. r. | n. r. | 29/33 cases |
| Kaiser et al. [ | 7 / 15 | z-score | n. r. | infantile at age of 15 years | severely impaired | n. r. | not present | present |
i median age in years
ii case report
iii n. r. = not reported
iv + = feature reported without more specific information
v no anthropometrical data reported
vi clinical neurological assessment in 23 cases; Neurocognitive evaluation in 65 pairs of children and controls
vii median (range) of z-score for height-for-age (stunting) referring to 2000 CDC growth standard [61]. http://www.cdc.gov/growthcharts/cdc_charts.htm
viii Tanner maturity stage (TS) for breast or testis development in eight patients aged 13 to 18 years: TS1 in two patients (infantile), TS2 in five, TS3 in one
ix z-score for height-for-age (stunting) referring to 1977 NCHS growth standard [62]. http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/series/sr_11/sr11_165.pdf