Nevin Remington L, Croft Ashley M
Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 624 N. Broadway, Room 782, Baltimore, MD, 21205, USA.
School of Pharmacy and Biomedical Science, University of Portsmouth, James Watson Building (West), Portsmouth, Hants, PO1 2FR, UK.
Malar J. 2016 Jun 22;15:332. doi: 10.1186/s12936-016-1391-6.
The modern medical literature implicates malaria, and particularly the potentially fatal form of cerebral malaria, with a risk of neurocognitive impairment. Yet historically, even milder forms of malaria were associated in the literature with a broad range of psychiatric effects, including disorders of personality, mood, memory, attention, thought, and behaviour. In this article, the history of psychiatric effects attributed to malaria and post-malaria syndromes is reviewed, and insights from the historical practice of malariotherapy in contributing to understanding of these effects are considered. This review concludes with a discussion of the potentially confounding role of the adverse effects of anti-malarial drugs, particularly of the quinoline class, in the unique attribution of certain psychiatric effects to malaria, and of the need for a critical reevaluation of the literature in light of emerging evidence of the chronic nature of these adverse drug effects.
现代医学文献表明,疟疾,尤其是具有潜在致命性的脑型疟疾,会带来神经认知障碍风险。然而,从历史上看,即便症状较轻的疟疾在文献中也与广泛的精神影响有关,包括人格、情绪、记忆、注意力、思维和行为障碍。本文回顾了归因于疟疾和疟疾后综合征的精神影响的历史,并探讨了疟疾病疗法的历史实践在帮助理解这些影响方面的见解。这篇综述最后讨论了抗疟药物(尤其是喹啉类药物)的不良反应在将某些精神影响独特地归因于疟疾方面可能产生的混淆作用,以及鉴于这些药物不良反应的慢性性质的新证据而对文献进行批判性重新评估的必要性。