Three villages in Boko Health Zone, Bandundu Province, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), had 61 konzo cases and konzo prevalences of 2.5%, 4.1% and 7.5% respectively. Konzo cases occurred every year for 10 years and every month, peaking in July. The high mean cyanide content of cassava flour of 50 ppm was due to short soaking of cassava roots for 1-2 days instead of 3-4 days. Konzo cases were examined and village women taught the wetting method that removes cyanogens from flour. The villages were visited every month for 1 year following previous methodology. No new konzo cases occurred during the intervention, mean flour cyanide levels reduced from 50 to 14 ppm and mean urinary thiocyanate levels of school children reduced from 930 to 150 μmole/L. The percentage of children with urinary thiocyanate levels of >350 μmole/L was reduced from a maximum of 80 in Ikialala before the intervention to 0 in Ikusama, Ikialala and 3 in Imboso Mwanga 1 year later. This is the second time that konzo has been controlled and success depends on regular use of the wetting method by village women. The methodology is now being used in other villages in DRC with financial support of AusAID.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fct.2013.08.012 | DOI Listing |
Neurology
April 2020
From the Department of Internal Medicine (O.K.S., L.H.), University of Zambia School of Medicine, Lusaka; Global Neurology Program (O.K.S.), Division of Neuroimmunology, Center for Virology and Vaccine Research, Department of Neurology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; Ministry of Health (M.K., E.C.-K.); ASPPH/CDC Allan Rosenfield Global Health Fellowship Program (R.K.), Lusaka; Department of Public Health and Research (A.N.M.) and Zambia Field Epidemiology Training Program (P.K.), Ministry of Health; World Health Organization (M.L.M.); Virology Laboratory (M.L.M.) and Department of Physiotherapy (M.N.M.), Children's Hospital, University Teaching Hospital, Lusaka, Zambia; Institute of Human Virology (L.H.), Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore; Zambia Agriculture Research Institute (P.C.C.), Plant Protection and Quarantine Division, Lusaka; and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (M.M.-E., J.M.J., H.C.B.), Atlanta, GA.
Objective: To identify the etiology of an outbreak of spastic paraparesis among women and children in the Western Province of Zambia suspected to be konzo.
Methods: We conducted an outbreak investigation of individuals from Mongu District, Western Province, Zambia, who previously developed lower extremity weakness. Cases were classified with the World Health Organization definition of konzo.
PLoS One
January 2020
Roots and Tubers Department, Naliendele Agricultural Research Institute, Mtwara, Tanzania.
Soils in areas affected by konzo (a cassava cyanide intoxication paralytic disorder) are predominantly infertile and probably unable to supply cultivated cassava with the nutrients it needs to achieve optimal growth. Soil nutrient supply in these areas could also be influencing cyanogenic glucoside production in cassava, however there is hardly any knowledge on this. An assessment of soil nutrient levels on crop fields in konzo-affected areas was therefore carried out to determine their adequacy for optimal cassava growth.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFood Sci Nutr
July 2016
Department of Biochemistry Faculdade de Medicina Universidade Eduardo Mondlane Maputo Mozambique.
Konzo is an irreversible paralysis of the legs that occurs mainly in children and young women associated with large cyanide intake from bitter cassava coupled with malnutrition. In East Africa outbreaks occur during drought, when cassava plants produce much more cyanogens than normal. A wetting method that removes cyanogens from cassava flour was taught to the women of three konzo villages in Mozambique, to prevent sporadic konzo and konzo outbreaks in the next drought.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFToxicol Rep
April 2015
Centre Neuropsychopathologique, Universite de Kinshasa, The Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Six villages in Boko Health Zone, Bandundu Province, DRC, were studied with 4588 people, 144 konzo cases and konzo prevalences of 2.0-5.2%.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose Of Review: This article provides an update on the various metabolic and toxic causes of myelopathy. The clinical features, laboratory findings, characteristic imaging and electrodiagnostic patterns, and approach to treatment are reviewed in depth.
Recent Findings: Vitamin B12 deficiency is a common condition, with prevalence rates that increase with age, and is particularly common in the elderly and in certain geographic areas.
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