1. Magnetic resonance imaging during life: the key to unlock cerebral malaria pathogenesis?
- Author
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Samuel C. Wassmer, Terrie E. Taylor, Sam Kampondeni, Saroj Kanta Mishra, Michael J. Potchen, Megharay Majhi, Sanjib Mohanty, and Premanand Panda
- Subjects
Malawi ,Erythrocytes ,Endemic Diseases ,Brain Edema ,Review ,Brain Ischemia ,Pathogenesis ,Brain ischemia ,Cause of Death ,Eye Infections, Parasitic ,Coma ,Malaria, Falciparum ,Child ,Cerebral malaria ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,biology ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,3. Good health ,Infectious Diseases ,Cerebral Malaria ,Cerebrovascular Circulation ,Disease Progression ,Autopsy ,MRI ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Asia ,Plasmodium falciparum ,Malaria, Cerebral ,Neuroimaging ,Pathophysiology ,Models, Biological ,Uncomplicated malaria ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Intensive care medicine ,Developing Countries ,business.industry ,Microcirculation ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Postmortem Changes ,Immunology ,Parasitology ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business - Abstract
Understanding the mechanisms underlying the pathophysiology of cerebral malaria in patients with Plasmodium falciparum infection is necessary to implement new curative interventions. While autopsy-based studies shed some light on several pathological events that are believed to be crucial in the development of this neurologic syndrome, their investigative potential is limited and has not allowed the identification of causes of death in patients who succumb to it. This can only be achieved by comparing features between patients who die from cerebral malaria and those who survive. In this review, several alternative approaches recently developed to facilitate the comparison of specific parameters between fatal, non-fatal cerebral malaria and uncomplicated malaria patients are described, as well as their limitations. The emergence of neuroimaging as a revolutionary tool in identifying critical structural and functional modifications of the brain during cerebral malaria is discussed and highly promising areas of clinical research using magnetic resonance imaging are highlighted.
- Published
- 2014
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