OBJECTIVE-Cerebral malaria affects >785 000 African children every year. We previously documented an increased frequency of cognitive impairment in children with cerebral malaria 6 months after their initial malaria episode. This study was conducted to determine the long-term effects of cerebral malaria on the cognitive function of these children.METHODS-Children who were 5 to 12 years of age and presented to Mulago Hospital, Kampala, Uganda, with cerebral malaria (n = 44) or uncomplicated malaria (n = 54), along with healthy, asymptomatic community children (n = 89), were enrolled in a prospective cohort study of cognition. Cognitive testing was performed at enrollment and 2 years later. The primary outcome was presence of a deficit in ≥1 of 3 cognitive areas tested.RESULTS-At 2-year follow-up testing, 26.3% of children with cerebral malaria and 12.5% with uncomplicated malaria had cognitive deficits in ≥1 area, as compared with 7.6% of community children. Deficits in children with cerebral malaria were primarily in the area of attention (cerebral malaria, 18.4%, vs community children, 2.5%). After adjustment for age, gender, nutrition, home environment, and school level, children with cerebral malaria had a 3.67-fold increased risk for a cognitive deficit compared with community children. Cognitive impairment at 2-year follow-up was associated with hyporeflexia on admission and neurologic deficits 3 months after discharge.CONCLUSIONS-Cerebral malaria is associated with long-term cognitive impairments in 1 of 4 child survivors. Future studies should investigate the mechanisms involved so as to develop interventions aimed at prevention and rehabilitation.
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Author ManuscriptPediatrics. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2009 July 1.
Published in final edited form as:Pediatrics.
What's Known on This SubjectRetrospective studies have suggested that cerebral malaria in children is associated with long-term cognitive deficits.
What This Study AddsThis is the first prospective study to document long-term cognitive impairment in children with cerebral malaria. We document that deficits found early persist long-term, whereas additional new deficits are discovered on long-term follow-up.Cerebral Malaria (CM), which is estimated to affect 785 000 children who are younger than 9 years in sub-Saharan Africa every year, 1 is among the deadliest forms of malaria, with an average mortality rate estimated at 18.6%. 2 Gross neurologic deficits are frequent at the time of discharge but generally resolve within 6 months of discharge. 3 A number of retrospective studies have suggested that CM is associated with higher frequencies of more subtle cognitive deficits as long as 3 to 9 years after the episode of CM, 4-8 but, to date, no long-term prospective studies of cognitive impairment after CM have been performed. In retrospective studies, the effects of variables such as home environment or nutrition, which may be important in cognitive development and which may change over time, cannot be assessed in c...