| Literature DB >> 30367650 |
Yanis Tamzali1, Sophie Demeret2, Elie Haddad1, Hélène Guillot1, Eric Caumes1,3, Stéphane Jauréguiberry4,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Post-malaria neurological syndrome (PMNS) is a debated entity, defined by neurological complications following a post-malaria symptom-free period and a negative blood smear. Four cases of PMNS are hereby reported and a review the literature performed to clarify the nosological framework of this syndrome.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30367650 PMCID: PMC6204022 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-018-2542-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Biological and radiological features of PMNS post P. falciparum, P. vivax or mixed infection
| CSF (WBC/%L) | CSF protein (g/L) | CRP (mg/L) | EEG | MRI | MRI matching ADEM or AIE | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Case 1 | 32/90 | 1.05 | N | Abnormal | N | – |
| Case 2 | 82/87 | 2.41 | N | Abnormal | Limbic and hippocampal hypersignal | ADEM plausible |
| Case 3 | 173/89 | 1.88 | 40 | Abnormal | N | – |
| Case 4 | NA | NA | N | NA | NA | |
| Nguyen [ | > 5 in 8/lymphocytic predominance | > 0.5 in 13 | NA | NA | NA | |
| O’Brien [ | NA | NA | NA | NA | WM lesions in CH, brainstem, cerebellum, thalamus and basal ganglia | ADEM plausible |
| Zambito [ | 20/100 | 0.86 | NA | Abnormal | N | – |
| Mizuno [ | 10/100 | 0.83 | 27 | Abnormal | N | – |
| Nayak [ | N/N | 0.66 | NA | NA | NA | |
| Prendki [ | 76/100 | 0.52 | 163 | Abnormal | N | – |
| Prendki [ | 26/91 | 1.88 | 9 | Abnormal | N | – |
| Falchook [ | NA | NA | N | NA | Pons, posterior internal capsule, thalamus, corona radiata, and periventricular hypersignal | ADEM unlikely |
| Matias [ | N/N | 1.83 | N | Abnormal | Extensive demyelinating lesions (subcortical WM and cerebellum) | ADEM or dysimmune plausible |
| Markley [ | 20/100 | 0.92 | NA | Abnormal | N | – |
| Forestier [ | 43/95 | 1.2 | N | Abnormal | N | – |
| Rakoto.[ | 31/98 | 2 | N | NA | NA | |
| Pace [ | NA | NA | 8 | NA | Brainstem and spinal cord high signal and swelling | ADEM plausible |
| Caetano [ | 123/100 | 1.88 | NA | Normal | N | |
| Mohsen [ | 22/100 | 1.4 | NA | Abnormal | Subcortical unilateral frontal and temporal, and cerebellar hypersignal with gadolinium enhancement | ADEM unlikely but not impossible |
| Schnorf [ | 10/95 | 0.6 | NA | Abnormal | Peri and supraventricular and cerebellar hypersignal | ADEM plausible |
| Schnorf [ | 80/87 | 1.8 | NA | Abnormal | N | |
| Agrawal [ | 5/100 | 1.12 | NA | NA | Asymmetric supraventricular, semi-ovale center, genu of corpus callosum WM hypersignal | NA |
| Rachita [ | 7/100 | 1.25 | NA | NA | Multifocal asymmetric diffuse WM hypersignal with small mass effect | ADEM |
| Lawn [ | N/N | 0.89 | N | NA | N | – |
| Lawn [ | 59/100 | 2.89 | N | Abnormal | N | – |
| Total abnormal | 25/42 | 33/42 | 5/14 | 14/15 | 9/21 | |
| % abnormal [95% CI] | 59.5 [44.5–72.9] | 78.6 [64.1–88.3] | 35.7 [16.3–61.3] | 93.3 [70.2–98.8] | 42.8 [24.5–63.5] | |
| Mean WBC/%L (SD) | 48a/96a (46)/(5.1) | 1.4b (0.6) | 49.4c (64.9) | |||
| Median WBC/%L (min–max) | 31a/100a (5–173)/(87–100) | 1.2b (0.5–2.9) | 27c (8–163) | |||
| Goyal [ | 70/NA | 0.5 | NA | NA | Diffuse periventricular, deep and subcortical WM hypersignal | |
| Sidhu [ | NA | NA | NA | NA | Subcortical, cortical, left parietal periventricular regions and pons hypersignal | |
| Kochar [ | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | |
| Kasundra [ | 10/100 | 0.65 | NA | NA | T1-weighted isointense and T2 and fluid-attenuated inversion recovery high signal in bilateral cerebellar hemispheres including vermis | |
| Mixed infection | ||||||
| Koibuchi [ | 30/NA | 0.46 | 52 | NA | Asymmetric spotty mottled cortical and subcortical lesions | |
| Mani [ | NA | NA | NA | Multifocal confluent areas of demyelination in the corpus callosum and periventricular region, myelitis | ||
Meningitis is defined in the CSF by CSF WBC ≥ 5/mL. CSF Protein ≥ 0.5 g/L is considered abnormal. CRP normal value ≤ 5 mg/L
CSF cerebrospinal fluid, WBC white blood count, %L proportion of lymphocytes, CRP c-reactive protein, WM white matter, NA not available, N normal, ADEM acute disseminated encephalomyelitis, AIE autoimmune encephalitis, LP lumbar puncture, SD standard deviation, [95% CI] 95% confidence interval
aCalculated on abnormal and available figured data, n = 17
bCalculated on abnormal and available figured data, n = 20
cCalculated on abnormal and available figured data, n = 5
Fig. 1T1 gadolinium-enhanced MRI sequences at day 48 (case 2). Left limbic and hippocampal hypersignals are indicated with white arrows
Main clinical characteristics for cases of post-malaria neurological syndrome following P. falciparum (A), P. vivax (B) and mixed (C) infections
| N | Age | Gender | Cerebral malaria | Severe malaria | Treatment of malaria | Symptom-free period (days) | Fever | Confusion | Seizures | Psychosis | Cerebellar involvement | Motor deficit | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A—PMNS post | |||||||||||||
| Case 1 | 1 | 33 | M | No | Yes | AD/AP | 10 | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | No |
| Case 2 | 1 | 29 | M | No | No | AP/Q/AD | 13 | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
| Case 3 | 1 | 36 | F | No | No | AP | 15 | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | No |
| Case 4 | 1 | 43 | F | No | Yes | Q/MF | 15 | No | No | No | No | Yes | No |
| Nguyen [ | 22 | 29a | 15 M | Yes 13 | Yes 21 | Q46% MF77% O18% AD59% | 1–60 (median 4) | Yes 9 | Yes 15 | Yes 8 | Yes 6 | Yes 1 | Yes 0 |
| O’Brien [ | 1 | 42 | M | Yes | Yes | Q/D | 45 | No | Yes | No | No | No | No |
| Zambito [ | 1 | 60 | M | Yes | Yes | Q/D | 11 | No | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| Mizuno [ | 1 | 54 | M | Yes | Yes | AD/MF | 21 | Yes | Yes | No | No | No | No |
| Nayak [ | 1 | 23 | M | Yes | Yes | AD/O | 7 | No | No | No | No | No | Yes |
| Prendki [ | 1 | 19 | M | Yes | Yes | Q | 46 | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No |
| Prendki [ | 1 | 19 | M | Yes | Yes | Q | 7 | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | No |
| Falchook [ | 1 | 50 | F | No | Yes | Q/D/AP | 11 | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | No |
| Matias [ | 1 | 61 | M | No | Yes | Q/D | 2 | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Markley [ | 1 | 42 | M | Yes | Yes | MF/Q/D/AP | 19 | No | Yes | No | No | Yes | No |
| Forestier [ | 1 | 50 | M | No | No | AP | 21 | No | Yes | No | No | No | No |
| Rakoto [ | 1 | 16 | M | Yes | No | Q/AD/O | 13 | No | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No |
| Pace [ | 1 | 48 | F | No | No | AD/O | 2 | No | No | No | No | No | Yes |
| Caetano [ | 1 | 60 | M | No | No | NA | NA | No | Yes | Yes | NA | Yes | No |
| Mohsen [ | 1 | 30 | F | No | Yes | Q/D | 35 | No | Yes | Yes | No | No | No |
| Schnorf [ | 1 | 34 | F | Yes | Yes | Q/O | 17 | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes | No |
| Schnorf [ | 1 | 61 | M | Yes | Yes | Q/MF | 10 | Yes | No | No | No | Yes | No |
| Agrawal [ | 1 | 12 | F | Yes | Yes | Q/D | 16 | No | Yes | Yes | No | No | No |
| Rachita [ | 1 | 4 | F | No | No | Q | 7 | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes |
| Lawn [ | 1 | 44 | M | No | Yes | Q/AF | 7 | Yes | Yes | No | No | No | No |
| Lawn [ | 1 | 22 | F | No | Yes | Q/AF | 3 | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | No |
| Total | 46 | 30 M | 24 | 38 | Q28, MF21, AD19, AF14, D7, O2 | 21 | 33 | 16 | 12 | 13 | 6 | ||
| % [95% CI] | 65.2 [50.7–77.3] | 52.2 [38.1–65.9] | 82.6 [69.3–90.9] | Q 60, MF 46, AD 41, AF 30, D 18, O 8 | 45.6 [32.1–59.8] | 71.7 [57.4–82.7] | 34.8 [22.7–49.2] | 26.1 [15.6–40.3] | 28.3 [17.3–42.6] | 13.0 [6.1–25.7] | |||
| Mean (SD) | 33.3 (12.7) | 15.4b (12.0) | |||||||||||
| Median (min–max) | 29 (4–61) | 13b (2–46) | |||||||||||
| B—PMNS post | |||||||||||||
| Goyal [ | 1 | 1.5 | F | Yes | Yes | AD/Q | 7 | Yes | Yes | No | No | No | Yes |
| Sidhu [ | 1 | 8 | F | Yes | Yes | AD | 7 | No | No | No | No | No | No |
| Kochar [ | 1 | 55 | M | No | No | CQ | 14 | No | No | No | No | No | Yes |
| Kasundra [ | 1 | 14 | F | No | NA | NA | 14 | No | No | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| C—PMNS post mixed infections ( | |||||||||||||
| Koibichi [ | 1 | 24 | M | No | Yes | Q | 26 | Yes | Yes | No | No | No | No |
| Mani [ | 1 | Adult | F | NA | NA | D/AD | NA | No | No | No | No | No | Yes |
M male, F female, D days, NA not available, Q quinin, AD artemisinin derivatives, MF mefloquine, AF anti-folic, O other, SD standard deviation, [95% CI] 95% confidence interval
aMean on 22 patients
bCalculated on 23 available figured data
Summary of PMNS due to Plasmodium falciparum
| Mean age | 33 years |
| Sex ratio (% male) | 66% |
| Previous severe malaria | 85% |
| Previous cerebral malaria | 50% |
| Malaria species | |
| Previous treatment for malaria | No effect |
| Traveler or local population | Described in both populations |
| Symptom-free period since malaria (mean) | 15 days |
| Fever | 46% |
| Mental confusion | 72% |
| Seizures | 35% |
| Psychosis | 26% |
| Cerebellar disorders | 28% |
| Motor deficit | 13% |
| MRI (abnormal) | 43% mostly white matter lesions |
| CSF | 52% lymphocytic meningitis, 77% high protein level but normal glucose level |
| EEG (abnormal) | 94% (encephalopathy) |
| Treatment | Corticosteroids advised in severe forms (lack of specific recommendation) |
| Prognosis | Excellent (100% |
aSee text for further details
Fig. 2Nosological framework for post-malaria neurological syndrome. DCA is difficult to classify in PMNS because in most of the published cases, data on parasite clearance was lacking. However, other elements (delay, lack of sensitivity to antimalarials) advocate for at least a relationship between them. Delayed post-infectious cerebellar involvement was described in a number of the confirmed PMNS cases; MRIs were normal for some and ADEM-compatible for others. ADEM: acute diffuse encephalomyelitis. MRI magnetic resonance imaging, DCA diffuse cerebellar ataxia, AIE autoimmune encephalitis, PMNS post-malaria neurological syndrome