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Cerebral malaria: insight into pathology from optical coherence tomography

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posted on 2024-04-22, 13:24 authored by Zhanhan Tu, Jack Gormley, Viral Sheth, Karl B Seydel, Terrie Taylor, Nicholas Beare, Valentina Barrera, Frank ProudlockFrank Proudlock, Chatonda Manda, Simon Harding, Irene Gottlob
AbstractWe aimed to investigate structural retinal changes in malarial retinopathy (MR) using hand-held optical coherence tomography (HH-OCT) to assess its diagnostic potential. Children with MR (n = 43) underwent ophthalmoscopy, fluorescein angiography and HH-OCT during admission, 1-month (n = 31) and 1-year (n = 8) post-discharge. Controls were comatose patients without malaria (n = 6) and age/sex-matched healthy children (n = 43). OCT changes and retinal layer thicknesses were compared. On HH-OCT, hyper-reflective areas (HRAs) were seen in the inner retina of 81% of MR patients, corresponding to ischaemic retinal whitening on fundus photography. Cotton wool spots were present in 37% and abnormal hyper-reflective dots, co-localized to capillary plexus, in 93%. Hyper-reflective vessel walls were present in 84%, and intra-retinal cysts in 9%. Vascular changes and cysts resolved within 48 h. HRAs developed into retinal thinning at 1 month (p = 0.027) which was more pronounced after 1 year (p = 0.009). Ischaemic retinal whitening is located within inner retinal layers, distinguishing it from cotton wool spots. Vascular hyper-reflectivity may represent the sequestration of parasitized erythrocytes in vessels, a key CM feature. The mechanisms of post-ischemic retinal atrophy and cerebral atrophy with cognitive impairment may be similar in CM survivors. HH-OCT has the potential for monitoring patients, treatment response and predicting neurological deficits.

Funding

Ultra-high resolution optical coherence tomography (UHR-SD OCT) in infants and children: characterisation of normal and abnormal foveal development

Medical Research Council

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Optical coherence tomography in infants and children: A normative database and assessment of clinical use

Medical Research Council

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National Institutes of Health 5U01AI126610 (NIH/NIAID)

The Retinal Microvasculature in Cerebral Malaria in African Children.

Wellcome Trust

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Malawi-Liverpool-Wellcome Trust Clinical Research Programme.

Wellcome Trust

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History

Citation

Tu, Z., Gormley, J., Sheth, V. et al. Cerebral malaria: insight into pathology from optical coherence tomography. Sci Rep 11, 15722 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-94495-9

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences/Psychology & Vision Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Scientific Reports

Volume

11

Issue

1

Pagination

(12)

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

issn

2045-2322

eissn

2045-2322

Acceptance date

2021-07-08

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2024-04-22

Spatial coverage

England

Language

English

Deposited by

Dr Zhanhan Tu

Deposit date

2024-04-07

Rights Retention Statement

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