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Zijlstra, Eduard E.; Hellemond, Jaap J. van; Moes, Arthur D.; Boer, Christa de; Boeschoten, Shelley A.; Blijswijk, Catharina E. M. van; Vuurst de Vries, Roos M. van der; Bailey, Peter A. B.; Kampondeni, Sam; Lieshout, Lisette van; Smits, Saskia L.; Katchanov, Juri; Mkandawire, Nyengo M. und Rothe, Camilla (2020): Nontraumatic Myelopathy in Malawi: A Prospective Study in an Area with High HIV Prevalence. In: American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, Bd. 102, Nr. 2: S. 451-457

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Abstract

Nontraumatic myelopathy causes severe morbidity and is not uncommon in Africa. Clinically, patients often present with paraplegia, and extrinsic cord compression and transverse myelitis are most common causes. Data on exact pathogenesis are scanty because of limitations in diagnostic methods. In Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital, Blantyre, Malawi, we recorded consecutive patients presenting with nontraumatic paraplegia for maximally 6 months between January and July 2010 and from March to December 2011. The diagnostic workup included imaging and examining blood, stool, urine, sputum, and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples for infection. After discharge, additional diagnostic tests, including screening for virus infections, borreliosis, syphilis, and schistosomiasis, were carried out in the Netherlands. The clinical diagnosis was, thus, revised in retrospect with a more accurate final differential diagnosis. Of 58 patients included, the mean age was 41 years (range, 12-83 years) and the median time between onset and presentation was 18 days (range, 0-121 days), and of 55 patients tested, 23 (42%) were HIV positive. Spinal tuberculosis (n = 24, 41%), tumors (n = 16, 28%), and transverse myelitis (n = 6, 10%) were most common;in sixcases (10%), no diagnosis could be made. The additional tests yielded evidence for CSF infection with Schistosoma, Treponema pallidum, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), HHV-6, HIV, as well as a novel cyclo virus. The diagnosis of the cause of paraplegia is complex and requires access to an magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan and other diagnostic (molecular) tools to demonstrate infection. The major challenge is to confirm the role of detected pathogens in the pathophysiology and to design an effective and affordable diagnostic approach.

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