1. Low plasma arginine concentrations in children with cerebral malaria and decreased nitric oxide production.
- Author
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Lopansri BK, Anstey NM, Weinberg JB, Stoddard GJ, Hobbs MR, Levesque MC, Mwaikambo ED, and Granger DL
- Subjects
- Case-Control Studies, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Tanzania, Arginine blood, Malaria, Cerebral blood, Nitric Oxide biosynthesis
- Abstract
Nitric oxide (NO) production and mononuclear cell NO synthase 2 (NOS2) expression are high in healthy Tanzanian children but low in those with cerebral malaria. Factors that downregulate NOS2 also diminish factors involved in cellular uptake and biosynthesis of L-arginine, the substrate for NO synthesis. We therefore postulated that L-arginine concentrations would be low in individuals with cerebral malaria. We measured concentrations of L-arginine in cryopreserved plasma samples from Tanzanian children with and without malaria. L-arginine concentrations were low in individuals with cerebral malaria (mean 46 micromol/L, SD 14), intermediate in those with uncomplicated malaria (70 micromol/L, 20), and within the normal range in healthy controls (122 micromol/L, 22; p<0.0001). Analysis by logistic regression showed that hypoargininaemia was significantly associated with cerebral malaria case-fatality. Hypoargininaemia may contribute to limited NO production in children with cerebral malaria and to severe disease.
- Published
- 2003
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