Disease | malaria |
Symptom | C0035309|retinopathy |
Sentences | 9 |
PubMedID- 20595476 | The case fatality rate for patients who had cerebral malaria with retinopathy was 16.7%, whereas in the cerebral malaria group without retinopathy, it was 17.9%. |
PubMedID- 24578549 | The retina may be a good source of surrogate markers of cerebrovascular injury because paediatric cerebral malaria is associated with a retinopathy (‘malarial retinopathy’) that accurately predicts cerebral sequestration (taylor et al., 2004), correlates with severity of brain involvement (white et al., 2001), and is associated with mortality (beare et al., 2004). |
PubMedID- 21212217 | Statistical analysis was carried out using the spss version 16.0 and stata version 10. correlation of malaria severity with retinopathy severity was by p value for trend. |
PubMedID- 25378888 | Another likely explanation is anemic retinopathy induced by anemia of chronic malaria, which is well known to cause retinal vascular anomalies and pre-retinal hemorrhages. |
PubMedID- 25686067 | The retinopathy in association with malaria fever described so far includes retinal hemorrhages, vessel changes, retinal discoloration/whitening and papilledema. |
PubMedID- 21056005 | Methods: between 2005 and 2007, we did a prospective cohort study of survivors of cerebral malaria with malaria retinopathy in blantyre, malawi. |
PubMedID- 22125593 | Graphs showing median and scatter of plasma vwf and vwf propeptide levels in retinopathy positive children with cerebral malaria who died (died) or recovered (recovered) as measured by elisa (mann whitney u test, p = 0.873, p = 1.000, respectively). |
PubMedID- PMC2963213 | Severity of retinopathy correlated with severity of malaria, coma recovery time and markers of, and rheological factors important in, microcirculatory obstruction. |
PubMedID- 20704742 | Finally, this study used bedside ophthalmoscopy to test the clinical relevance of retinopathy in patients with severe malaria without fundus photography. |
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