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Cognitive impairment and behavioural disturbances following malaria or HIV infection in childhood

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Cognitive impairment and behavioural disturbances following malaria or HIV infection in childhood. / Kihara, Michael; Abubakar, Amina; Newton, Charles R. J. C.
Cognitive impairment and behavioural disturbances following malaria or HIV infection in childhood . ed. / Marina Bentivoglio; Esper A. Cavalheiro; Krister Kristensson; Nilesh B. Patel. New York : Springer, 2014. p. 369-390.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter (peer-reviewed)peer-review

Harvard

Kihara, M, Abubakar, A & Newton, CRJC 2014, Cognitive impairment and behavioural disturbances following malaria or HIV infection in childhood. in M Bentivoglio, EA Cavalheiro, K Kristensson & NB Patel (eds), Cognitive impairment and behavioural disturbances following malaria or HIV infection in childhood . Springer, New York , pp. 369-390. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-8100-3_21

APA

Kihara, M., Abubakar, A., & Newton, C. R. J. C. (2014). Cognitive impairment and behavioural disturbances following malaria or HIV infection in childhood. In M. Bentivoglio, E. A. Cavalheiro, K. Kristensson, & N. B. Patel (Eds.), Cognitive impairment and behavioural disturbances following malaria or HIV infection in childhood (pp. 369-390). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-8100-3_21

Vancouver

Kihara M, Abubakar A, Newton CRJC. Cognitive impairment and behavioural disturbances following malaria or HIV infection in childhood. In Bentivoglio M, Cavalheiro EA, Kristensson K, Patel NB, editors, Cognitive impairment and behavioural disturbances following malaria or HIV infection in childhood . New York : Springer. 2014. p. 369-390 doi: 10.1007/978-1-4614-8100-3_21

Author

Kihara, Michael ; Abubakar, Amina ; Newton, Charles R. J. C. / Cognitive impairment and behavioural disturbances following malaria or HIV infection in childhood. Cognitive impairment and behavioural disturbances following malaria or HIV infection in childhood . editor / Marina Bentivoglio ; Esper A. Cavalheiro ; Krister Kristensson ; Nilesh B. Patel. New York : Springer, 2014. pp. 369-390

Bibtex

@inbook{822b30cc044149c8886be914ee435820,
title = "Cognitive impairment and behavioural disturbances following malaria or HIV infection in childhood",
abstract = "While both falciparum malaria and human immunodeficiency virus infections are not classified under the neglected disease criteria, both have been shown to affect the central nervous system (CNS), which is of importance but neglected area of neuroscience research. The brunt of these two diseases is borne by children in sub-Saharan Africa, and unfortunately, the study of long-term effect cognitive deficits and disorders due the CNS infections in these children has been neglected. We review the evidence of the effect of falciparum malaria and HIV on the brain, describe the patterns of involvement and propose mechanisms by which these infections can alter the brain function. The results reveal that falciparum malaria results in different patterns of impairment, which may in part be explained by methodological and definition differences, however the cognitive impairment appear to cover all categories of cognition suggesting diffuse damage. HIV has been shown to impact on multiple developmental domains starting early in life and persisting into adolescence. Various biomedical and psychosocial factors have been observed to either exacerbate or ameliorate the negative effects of HIV. Existing knowledge gap on impairment related to malaria and HIV shows significant gaps especially as it relates to elucidating pathways to poor outcome. Future research efforts need to focus on understanding these mechanisms so as to guide targeted intervention.",
keywords = "Neuro-developmental, Falciparum, Africa, Children, AIDS",
author = "Michael Kihara and Amina Abubakar and Newton, {Charles R. J. C.}",
year = "2014",
month = mar,
day = "17",
doi = "10.1007/978-1-4614-8100-3_21",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781461480990",
pages = "369--390",
editor = "Marina Bentivoglio and Cavalheiro, {Esper A.} and { Kristensson}, Krister and Patel, {Nilesh B.}",
booktitle = "Cognitive impairment and behavioural disturbances following malaria or HIV infection in childhood",
publisher = "Springer",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Cognitive impairment and behavioural disturbances following malaria or HIV infection in childhood

AU - Kihara, Michael

AU - Abubakar, Amina

AU - Newton, Charles R. J. C.

PY - 2014/3/17

Y1 - 2014/3/17

N2 - While both falciparum malaria and human immunodeficiency virus infections are not classified under the neglected disease criteria, both have been shown to affect the central nervous system (CNS), which is of importance but neglected area of neuroscience research. The brunt of these two diseases is borne by children in sub-Saharan Africa, and unfortunately, the study of long-term effect cognitive deficits and disorders due the CNS infections in these children has been neglected. We review the evidence of the effect of falciparum malaria and HIV on the brain, describe the patterns of involvement and propose mechanisms by which these infections can alter the brain function. The results reveal that falciparum malaria results in different patterns of impairment, which may in part be explained by methodological and definition differences, however the cognitive impairment appear to cover all categories of cognition suggesting diffuse damage. HIV has been shown to impact on multiple developmental domains starting early in life and persisting into adolescence. Various biomedical and psychosocial factors have been observed to either exacerbate or ameliorate the negative effects of HIV. Existing knowledge gap on impairment related to malaria and HIV shows significant gaps especially as it relates to elucidating pathways to poor outcome. Future research efforts need to focus on understanding these mechanisms so as to guide targeted intervention.

AB - While both falciparum malaria and human immunodeficiency virus infections are not classified under the neglected disease criteria, both have been shown to affect the central nervous system (CNS), which is of importance but neglected area of neuroscience research. The brunt of these two diseases is borne by children in sub-Saharan Africa, and unfortunately, the study of long-term effect cognitive deficits and disorders due the CNS infections in these children has been neglected. We review the evidence of the effect of falciparum malaria and HIV on the brain, describe the patterns of involvement and propose mechanisms by which these infections can alter the brain function. The results reveal that falciparum malaria results in different patterns of impairment, which may in part be explained by methodological and definition differences, however the cognitive impairment appear to cover all categories of cognition suggesting diffuse damage. HIV has been shown to impact on multiple developmental domains starting early in life and persisting into adolescence. Various biomedical and psychosocial factors have been observed to either exacerbate or ameliorate the negative effects of HIV. Existing knowledge gap on impairment related to malaria and HIV shows significant gaps especially as it relates to elucidating pathways to poor outcome. Future research efforts need to focus on understanding these mechanisms so as to guide targeted intervention.

KW - Neuro-developmental

KW - Falciparum

KW - Africa

KW - Children

KW - AIDS

U2 - 10.1007/978-1-4614-8100-3_21

DO - 10.1007/978-1-4614-8100-3_21

M3 - Chapter (peer-reviewed)

SN - 9781461480990

SP - 369

EP - 390

BT - Cognitive impairment and behavioural disturbances following malaria or HIV infection in childhood

A2 - Bentivoglio, Marina

A2 - Cavalheiro, Esper A.

A2 - Kristensson, Krister

A2 - Patel, Nilesh B.

PB - Springer

CY - New York

ER -