Prognostic significance and course of retinopathy in children with severe malaria.

OBJECTIVES To relate retinal findings in children treated for severe malaria to disease outcome and to determine the course of changes in the fundus. METHODS A prospective study of children with cerebral malaria (CM) and severe malarial anemia admitted to the Malaria Research Project, Blantyre, Malawi, during 2 malaria seasons. Indirect and direct ophthalmoscopy were performed on admission and daily, subject to the patient's cooperation. RESULTS Three hundred twenty-six patients (91%) with complicated malaria were recruited. Two hundred seventy-eight patients had CM and of these 170 (61%) had some degree of retinopathy; 25 (53%) of 47 with severe malarial anemia had retinopathy. In CM, retinopathy was associated with subsequent death (relative risk, 3.7; 95% confidence interval, 1.6-8.5) and papilledema conferred the highest risk (relative risk, 4.5; 95% confidence interval, 2.7-7.6). Increasing severity of retinal signs was related to increasing risk of a fatal outcome (P<.05), independent of papilledema. In survivors, retinal signs were associated with prolonged time to recover consciousness (P<.001). Patients with severe malarial anemia had better outcomes and less severe retinopathy than those with CM. In 116 patients with CM, fundi were followed up longitudinally during admission and in 27 patients after hospital discharge. A large increase in retinal hemorrhages was associated with death (P =.02). Retinal signs resolved over 1 to 4 weeks without retinal sequelae. CONCLUSIONS In childhood CM, severity of retinopathy is related to prolonged coma and death. Our results support the hypothesis that retinal signs in CM are related to cerebral pathophysiology.

[1]  P. Torzillo,et al.  Retinopathy in malaria. , 1982, Papua and New Guinea medical journal.

[2]  C. Craddock,et al.  Clinical features and outcome of severe malaria in Gambian children. , 1995, Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

[3]  N. White,et al.  Human cerebral malaria. A quantitative ultrastructural analysis of parasitized erythrocyte sequestration. , 1985, The American journal of pathology.

[4]  D. Kwiatkowski,et al.  Neurological sequelae of cerebral malaria in children , 1990, The Lancet.

[5]  S. Jaffar,et al.  Predictors of a fatal outcome following childhood cerebral malaria. , 1997, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene.

[6]  S. Harding,et al.  Photographic and angiographic characterization of the retina of Kenyan children with severe malaria. , 1997, Archives of ophthalmology.

[7]  D. Kochar,et al.  Ophthalmoscopic abnormalities in adults with falciparum malaria. , 1998, QJM : monthly journal of the Association of Physicians.

[8]  Z. Premji,et al.  Acute haemolysis in childhood falciparum malaria. , 2001, Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

[9]  R A Carr,et al.  Correlation of retinal haemorrhages with brain haemorrhages in children dying of cerebral malaria in Malawi. , 2001, Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

[10]  P. Haslett Retinal haemorrhages in Zambian children with cerebral malaria. , 1991, Journal of Tropical Pediatrics.

[11]  C. Newton,et al.  Pathophysiology of fatal falciparum malaria in African children. , 1998, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene.

[12]  Schmid Ah Cerebral malaria. On the nature and significance of vascular changes. , 1974 .

[13]  M. Molyneux,et al.  Clinical features and prognostic indicators in paediatric cerebral malaria: a study of 131 comatose Malawian children. , 1989, The Quarterly journal of medicine.

[14]  O. Walker,et al.  Prognostic risk factors and post mortem findings in cerebral malaria in children. , 1992, Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

[15]  S. Harding,et al.  A review of the spectrum of clinical ocular fundus findings in P. falciparum malaria in African children with a proposed classification and grading system. , 1999, Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

[16]  M. Alpers,et al.  Indicators of fatal outcome in paediatric cerebral malaria: a study of 134 comatose Papua New Guinean children. , 1997, International journal of epidemiology.

[17]  P. Ferrinho,et al.  Independent indicators of outcome in severe paediatric malaria: maternal education, acidotic breathing and convulsions on admission , 2000, Annals of tropical paediatrics.

[18]  S. Harding,et al.  Inter-observer concordance in grading retinopathy in cerebral malaria , 2002, Annals of tropical medicine and parasitology.

[19]  N. White,et al.  Retinal hemorrhage, a common sign of prognostic significance in cerebral malaria. , 1983, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene.

[20]  J. Cuzick,et al.  A Wilcoxon-type test for trend. , 1985, Statistics in medicine.

[21]  S. Harding,et al.  Visual outcomes in children in Malawi following retinopathy of severe malaria , 2004, British Journal of Ophthalmology.

[22]  A. H. Schmid Cerebral malaria. On the nature and significance of vascular changes. , 1974, European Neurology.

[23]  R. Gbadegesin,et al.  Retinal haemorrhage in cerebral malaria. , 1997, East African medical journal.

[24]  S. Looareesuwan,et al.  Human cerebral malaria in Thailand: a clinico-pathological correlation. , 1990, Immunology letters.

[25]  R. Snow,et al.  Indicators of life-threatening malaria in African children. , 1995, The New England journal of medicine.

[26]  S. Lewallen,et al.  Retinal findings predictive of outcome in cerebral malaria. , 1996, Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

[27]  S. Lewallen,et al.  Ocular fundus findings in Malawian children with cerebral malaria. , 1993, Ophthalmology.

[28]  J Gardiner,et al.  Clinical-histopathological correlation of the abnormal retinal vessels in cerebral malaria. , 2000, Archives of ophthalmology.