Abstract

Nodding Syndrome is a seizure disorder of children in Mundri County, Western Equatoria, South Sudan. The disorder is reported to be spreading in South Sudan and northern Uganda. To describe environmental, nutritional, infectious, and other factors that existed before and during the de novo 1991 appearance and subsequent increase in cases through 2001. Household surveys, informant interviews, and case-control studies conducted in Lui town and Amadi village in 2001-2002 were supplemented in 2012 by informant interviews in Lui and Juba, South Sudan. Nodding Syndrome was associated with Onchocerca volvulus and Mansonella perstans infections, with food use of a variety of sorghum (serena) introduced as part of an emergency relief program, and was inversely associated with a history of measles infection. There was no evidence to suggest exposure to a manmade neurotoxic pollutant or chemical agent, other than chemically dressed seed intended for planting but used for food. Food use of cyanogenic plants was documented, and exposure to fungal contaminants could not be excluded. Nodding Syndrome in South Sudan has an unknown etiology. Further research is recommended on the association of Nodding Syndrome with onchocerciasis/mansonelliasis and neurotoxins in plant materials used for food.

Highlights

  • Nodding Syndrome is a progressive generalized seizure disorder of children that has been described exclusively in African countries, with particular reference to Tanzania,[1,2,3,4] South Sudan[5,6,7] and, most recently, northern Uganda.[8]

  • Unlike the Moru, who depend on rain-fed subsistence agriculture, the Dinka are agripastoral cattle herders who traditionally stay in riverside camps during the dry season and otherwise plant millet and other grains

  • We found no evidence of consumption of unripe ackee fruit (Blighia sapida), which induces hypoglycemia and seizures especially in children and may serve as a substitute foodstuff during times of food shortage (November through May in west Africa)[58] None of these wild plants shows any obvious possible relationship to Nodding Syndrome

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Summary

Introduction

Nodding Syndrome is a progressive generalized seizure disorder of children that has been described exclusively in African countries, with particular reference to Tanzania,[1,2,3,4] South Sudan[5,6,7] and, most recently, northern Uganda.[8] The signature sign, repetitive dropping of the head resulting from an atonic seizure events, has been described in Liberia.[9,10] Nodding Syndrome occurs in the setting. Nodding Syndrome is a seizure disorder of children in Mundri County, Western Equatoria, South Sudan.

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