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A Second Population-Based Cohort Study in Cameroon Confirms the Temporal Relationship Between Onchocerciasis and Epilepsy

Cédric B. Chesnais, C. Bizet, Jérémy T. Campillo, Wepnyu Yembe Njamnshi, Jean Bopda, Philippe Nwane, Sébastien D. S. Pion, Alfred K. Njamnshi, Michel Boussinesq

2020Open Forum Infectious Diseases72 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract To confirm our earlier evidence of a temporal and dose–response relationship between onchocerciasis and epilepsy, we conducted another cohort study in a different setting in Cameroon. Individuals whose Onchocerca volvulus microfilarial density (Ov-MFD) was measured in 1992–1994 when they were children were revisited in 2019 to determine if they acquired epilepsy. With reference to individuals with no microfilariae in 1992–1994, the relative risks of acquiring epilepsy were 0.96, 2.76, 3.67, and 11.87 in subjects with initial Ov-MFD of 1–7, 8–70, 71–200, and > 200 microfilariae per skin snip, respectively. This study further demonstrates reproducibility using the Bradford Hill’s criteria for causality.

Topics & Concepts

OnchocerciasisMedicineEpilepsyPopulationCohortCohort studyDemographyPediatricsInternal medicinePsychiatryEnvironmental healthPathologySociologyParasitic Diseases Research and TreatmentParasite Biology and Host InteractionsParasites and Host Interactions
A Second Population-Based Cohort Study in Cameroon Confirms the Temporal Relationship Between Onchocerciasis and Epilepsy | Litcius