OBJECTIVE-This study was conducted to assess prospectively the frequency of cognitive deficits in children with cerebral malaria.METHODS-Cognitive testing in the areas of working memory, attention, and learning was performed for Ugandan children 5 to 12 years of age with cerebral malaria (n = 44), children with uncomplicated malaria (n = 54), and healthy community children (n = 89) at admission and 3 and 6 months later.RESULTS-Six months after discharge, 21.4% of children with cerebral malaria had cognitive deficits, compared with 5.8% of community children. Deficits were seen in the areas of working memory (11.9% vs 2.3%) and attention (16.7% vs 2.3%). Children with cerebral malaria had a 3.7-fold increased risk of a cognitive deficit, compared with community children, after adjustment for age, gender, nutritional status, school level, and home environment. Among children with cerebral malaria, those with a cognitive deficit had more seizures before admission (mean: 4.1 vs 2.2) and a longer duration of coma (43.6 vs 30.5 hours), compared with those without a deficit. Children with uncomplicated malaria did not have an increased frequency of cognitive deficits.CONCLUSIONS-Cerebral malaria may be a major cause of cognitive impairment in children in sub-Saharan Africa. Cognitive deficits in children with cerebral malaria are more likely for those who have multiple seizures before effective treatment for cerebral malaria.
NIH-PA Author ManuscriptNIH-PA Author Manuscript
NIH-PA Author ManuscriptIt has been estimated that each year 575 000 children suffer from cerebral malaria (CM) in sub-Saharan Africa. 1 CM is among the deadliest complications of malaria, with an estimated mortality rate in sub-Saharan Africa of 18.6% among hospitalized children. 2 Neurologic deficits are seen frequently at the time of hospital discharge for children with CM, but most resolve within 6 months after discharge. 3 However, several retrospective studies suggested that cognitive deficits in children with CM are more frequent (occurring in 11%-28% of children with CM) and persist for a far longer time (3-9 years after the CM episode) than neurologic deficits. [4][5][6][7][8] The data from those studies were strong and generally consistent, but one study found no evidence of increased cognitive deficits. 9 Furthermore, the original clinical and social assessments of those children were performed as part of studies investigating other aspects of CM and not as part of a study designed specifically to address the question of cognitive deficits in children with CM. Initial cognitive testing was performed for case and control subjects several years after the episode of CM. History, physical examination, and laboratory data were limited to those collected from medical charts, and data on potential confounding risk factors for cognitive deficits, such as home environment and level of schooling at the time of enrollment, either were not collected or were collected through questionnaires and therefore were subject to significant recall bia...