In:
Tropical Medicine & International Health, Wiley, Vol. 4, No. 5 ( 1999-05), p. 390-394
Abstract:
Summary Kidney function was studied in 80 Gambian children with cerebral malaria, 73 children with mild malaria, and in 19 children with other febrile illnesses. Serum creatinine was measured, and the excretion in urine of immunoglobulin G, transferrin, albumin and alpha 1 microglobulin was determined. Twenty‐five percent of children with cerebral malaria, and 4% of children with mild malaria had an elevated serum creatinine above 62 μmol/l. Increased urinary protein excretion was frequent: 53% of children with cerebral malaria had a glomerulo‐tubular pattern of protein excretion, and 46% a tubular pattern. Median albuminuria was 68 mg/l in children with cerebral malaria, 18 mg/l in children with mild malaria, and 9 mg/l in febrile children with other diseases ( P 〈 0.0001). There was no significant association between the proteinuria and height of fever or the degree of parasitaemia, and there was no significant association between death and signs of renal impairment. Renal involvement is common in children with malaria in The Gambia, with prerenal, glomerular, and tubulo‐interstitial factors contributing. It is more pronounced in children with cerebral malaria than in those with mild malaria. However, renal dysfunction is relatively mild and does not indicate a worse prognosis.
Type of Medium:
Online Resource
ISSN:
1360-2276
,
1365-3156
DOI:
10.1046/j.1365-3156.1999.00409.x
Language:
English
Publisher:
Wiley
Publication Date:
1999
detail.hit.zdb_id:
2018112-7
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