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    Afr Health. 1995 Sep;17(6):18-9.

    Hearing loss: a possible consequence of malaria.

    Abstract

    PIP:

    More than 200 million people worldwide contract malaria from mosquito bites. In sub-Saharan Africa, 100 million clinical cases of malaria are reported every year, resulting in almost one million deaths. Malaria has been implicated in the causation of deafness in several studies in the West Africa subregion. This paper examines the association between malaria and deafness, and considers which factors may be involved in the causation of deafness. Although age, immunity, the type of malaria parasite, fever, complications of malaria, and complications resulting from the drug treatment of malaria may contribute to the development of deafness in malaria, the actual mechanism of causation is not clearly understood. Deafness in malaria is associated with P. falciparum parasitic infection. The author is certain that the high fever in malaria, leading to febrile convulsions and cerebral involvement, can result in deafness. Further investigation is needed to determine whether the presence of untreated malaria parasites in the blood causes deafness.

    PMID:
    12290448
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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