CEREBRAL ANAEROBIC GLYCOLYSIS AND REDUCED CEREBRAL OXYGEN TRANSPORT IN HUMAN CEREBRAL MALARIA
The Lancet 332(8610): 534-538
Article 1988 English
Authors
DW
D A Warrell
NV
N. Veall
PC
Pornthep Chanthavanich
Abstract
1 min read
In 12 patients comatose with cerebral malaria, cerebral blood flow was 52·2 (SE 4·0) ml/100 g per min, within the reported range for healthy controls, but cerebral vascular resistance was raised at 1·66 (0·19) mm Hg/ml per 100 g per min. Cerebral oxygen consumption (1·90 [0·23] ml/100 g per min), and cerebral arteriovenous oxygen content difference (3·5 [0·43] ml/dl) were subnormal, while cerebral venous pO2 (5·7 [0·2] kpA) was raised. After recovery of consciousness there were significant decreases in arterial lactate concentration (2·44 [0·45] to 1·19 [0·45] μmol/l) and cerebral lactate production (17·4 [7·9] to 5·6 [1·1] mmol/100 g per minute). These results provide evidence of cerebral anaerobic glycolysis associated with inadequate oxygen delivery to the brain consistent with either inhibition of cerebral oxidative metabolism or the microcirculatory obstruction envisaged in the "mechanical" hypothesis for cerebral malaria.
Hugh Kingston, Aniruddha Ghose, Voravut Rungpradubvong, Michael Herdman, Katherine Plewes, Haruhiko Ishioka, Stije J. Leopold, Richard J. Maude, Benjamas Intharabut, Sanjib Mohanty, Nicholas Day, Sir Nicholas White, Md. Amir Hossain, Nicholas M. Anstey, Arjen M. Dondorp
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