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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (malaria)
44,886 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Serum cytokine profiles were evaluated in immunized and nonimmunized human volunteers after challenge with infectious Plasmodium falciparum sporozoites. Three volunteers had been immunized with x-irradiated sporozoites and were fully protected from infection. Four nonimmune volunteers all developed symptomatic infection at which time they were treated. Sera from all volunteers were collected at approximately 20 time points during the 28-d challenge period; levels of IL-1 alpha, IL-1 beta, IL-2, IFN-gamma, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, IL-4, IL-6, granulocyte macrophage-colony-stimulating factor, and soluble CD4, CD8, and IL-2 receptor (sCD4, sCD8, and sIL-2R, respectively) were determined by ELISA. C-reactive protein (CRP) was assayed by radial immunodiffusion. Parasitemic subjects developed increases in CRP and IFN-gamma, with less marked increases in sIL-2R and sCD8; the other cytokines tested did not change. CRP increases were abrupt and occurred at the onset of fever (day 14 after challenge). IFN-gamma increases were also abrupt, preceding those of fever and CRP by one day. Increases in sIL-2R and sCD8 were more gradual. Increases in fever, CRP, IFN-gamma, and sCD8 were concordant in each volunteer. Early IL-6 increases were noted in the protected vaccinees. Thus, after challenge with virulent P. falciparum, unique systemic cytokine profiles were detectable both in immunized, nonparasitemic volunteers and in unvaccinated, parasitemic subjects. The contrasting cytokine profiles in the two groups may relate to mechanisms of protection and immunopathology in experimental human malaria.
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PMID:Serum cytokine profiles in experimental human malaria. Relationship to protection and disease course after challenge. 164 22

Seventeen adult patients with acute Plasmodium falciparum malaria, admitted to the Hospital for Tropical Diseases, were studied. Serial measurements of the serum concentration of C-reactive protein, serum amyloid A protein, and percentage parasitaemia were determined, together with initial measurement of serum electrolytes, liver function, haemoglobin, white cell and platelet counts. Initial C-reactive protein and serum amyloid A concentrations were increased (C-reactive protein mean 49.0 mg/l serum amyloid A 28 mg/l) falling towards the normal range by the seventh day of treatment. There was a significant correlation between the pretreatment parasite count and clinical and laboratory markers of inflammation. C-reactive protein and serum amyloid A concentrations correlated inversely with the serum sodium. These results indicate that measurement of acute phase reactants such as C-reactive protein and serum amyloid A may prove valuable in assessing the severity of P falciparum malaria, and in following the response to antimalarial treatment.
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PMID:Measurement of acute phase proteins for assessing severity of Plasmodium falciparum malaria. 170 16

In the acquisition of protection against malaria, the role played by nonspecific factors, some being part of the cascade effect of cytokines, has to be considered. The C-reactive protein, a major acute phase reactant secreted by interleukin-1 stimulated hepatocytes, has an effect on the hepatic development of Plasmodia, both by preventing penetration of the sporozoite into the hepatocyte and by blocking parasite division through an antibody-like effect. This latter effect confirms the potential interest of targeting the uninuclear form of the parasite. Nevertheless, C-reactive Protein alone does not account for all the effects of the inflammatory response, other reactants from both serum and hepatocytes are also involved.
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PMID:Inflammatory status and preerythrocytic stages of malaria: role of the C-reactive protein. 199 57

We have studied prospectively the C-reactive protein values in the cerebrospinal fluid of 54 patients with bacterial meningitis, tuberculous meningitis, and severe malarial infection and convulsions without infections of the central nervous system. CSF CRP above 1 mg/l was observed in 23 out of 28 patients with bacterial meningitis (sensitivity of 82%). The specificity was 73% at the 1 mg/l level. Five out of 19 patients with severe malarial infection had CSF CRP levels above 1 mg/l. Two patients with TB meningitis were also studied. Both of them had CSF CRP above 1 mg/l. Five patients with febrile convulsions or sepsis without meningitis had CSF CRP below 1 mg/l. It is concluded that CSF CRP would not be used as a useful discriminatory test in areas where malaria and TB meningitis are common.
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PMID:C-reactive protein and bacterial meningitis. 246 9

Erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), C-reactive protein (CRP) and routine hematological parameters were reviewed in 258 patients with acute malaria and compared to a control group of 120 patients with other febrile illnesses after visiting malaria endemic areas. Thrombocytopenia was found in 80% of the malaria patients compared to 13% in controls (p less than 0.01). The malaria patients also had lower white blood cell counts and marginally lower hemoglobin values than control patients. No major differences were found in ESR or CRP values. Furthermore, there were no major differences in the hematological parameters between patients infected with different malaria species, or between patients with different ethnic background. Thrombocytopenia (platelet count less than 150 x 10(9)/l) had a predictive value positive of 56% and a predictive value negative of 95% for malaria in a febrile patient coming from an endemic area. Thus, the risk of malaria in a febrile thrombocytopenic patient coming from an endemic area was 56%, while the risk that another patient with a normal platelet count still had malaria was 5%.
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PMID:Changes in erythrocyte sedimentation rate, C-reactive protein and hematological parameters in patients with acute malaria. 258 46

C-Reactive protein has not been studied in malaria so far but with the reappearance of malaria in the southern part of Iran there is now an opportunity to study the behaviour of C-reactive protein in malaria. One hundred and sixty-two patients suffering from malaria have been so tested. Of those patients, 85.2% showed a positive result and among them more than 50% had a strongly positive reaction. It may be concluded that malaria is one of the outstanding diseases in which the C-reactive protein test is positive. Those patients who were examined for C-reactive protein in the first two days of the disease showed a negative result.
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PMID:C-reactive protein in malaria. 489 48

A microplate ELISA was developed to measure C-reactive protein (CRP) and it was used to establish the relationship between CRP levels and malaria. Highest serum CRP levels were found in African patients with high Plasmodium falciparum parastaemia. However, even African children with lower parasitaemia had higher CRP levels than others without parasitaemia. All African groups studied had CRP levels above those of a control UK group.
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PMID:Serum C-reactive protein levels and falciparum malaria. 639 34

Field studies of malaria in endemic areas frequently use the presence or levels of parasitaemia, together with the measurement of fever, as the primary criteria with which to identify cases. However, since malaria cases do not always present with measurable fever, and since asymptomatic parasitaemia occurs, additional episode markers might be useful epidemiological tools. We have measured the C-reactive protein and haptoglobin levels in paediatric patients presenting to a village health post in the Kilombero District in Tanzania and in convalescent sera from the same patients, in order to evaluate these acute-phase reactants as alternative markers of Plasmodium falciparum episodes. Among afebrile patients, C-reactive protein levels were highly correlated with parasite density. High C-reactive protein levels are therefore probably indicative of recent clinical malaria episodes in currently afebrile individuals with high parasite densities. An appropriate case definition for malaria in epidemiological studies in endemic areas might therefore be hyperparasitaemia accompanied by either, or both, measurable fever and raised C-reactive protein levels. This would give less biased estimates of the overall burden of malaria morbidity than does a definition which requires measurable fever. Levels of haptoglobin were highly negatively correlated with parasitaemia, but did not appear to be useful episode markers because this correlation was probably not related to acute morbidity. However, haptoglobin can be useful to assess at community level the impact of interventions on parasitaemia.
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PMID:Evaluation of C-reactive protein and haptoglobin as malaria episode markers in an area of high transmission in Africa. 803 66

A total of 14,740 schoolchildren in seven provinces of Shoa Administrative Region in Central Ethiopia were surveyed for the prevalence of goitre, xerophthalmia and anaemia. Haemoglobin and packed cell volume were assessed in 966 children in one province while an in-depth study was conducted on 344 children in the same province and two others. Goitre, xerophthalmia (Bitot's spots) and clinical anaemia were observed in 34.2, 0.91 and 18.6% respectively of the children. Most biochemical variables were within the normal range while those of haemoglobin (Hb), mean corpuscular Hb concentration (MCHC) and urinary I excretion were lower, and mean corpuscular volume, mean corpuscular Hb (MCH), and immunoglobulins G and M were higher. Hb was strongly correlated with retinol, ferritin, MCHC, MCH, packed cell volume and erythrocyte count while retinol formed a triad with transthyretin (TTR) and retinol-binding protein (RBP) which were all correlated with one another. Total and free thyroxin and total and free triiodothyronine were positively correlated as were the concentrations of the total and free hormones. Thyrotropin (TSH) was negatively correlated with total and free thyroxin and positively correlated with free triiodothyronine. Thyroxin and triiodothyronine in both free and combined forms were all correlated with thyroxin-binding globulin which in turn was negatively correlated with the triad retinol, RBP and TTR. The triad was also negatively correlated with C-reactive protein. Urinary I excretion was positively associated with total thyroxin and negatively associated with TSH. The anaemia found was not nutritional in origin but due to the effect of infestation with intestinal parasites and malaria.
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PMID:Interrelationship between vitamin A, iodine and iron status in schoolchildren in Shoa Region, central Ethiopia. 826 Apr 84

Children under 6 years of age living in an area of Tanzania highly endemic for malaria were tested for C-reactive protein (CRP) in order to determine how the acute-phase response is related to malaria in children of different ages and to investigate whether serum CRP concentrations might be useful in the qualification of morbidity in such children. The median CRP level in the 629 finger-prick blood samples measured, 6.0 mg/liter, was much higher than that reported in the blood of children in Europe. The CRP concentration was correlated with recent illness reported by the parents. High CRP levels were most strongly associated with Plasmodium falciparum parasitemia in children under 1 year of age. In older children, lower levels of CRP were associated with parasitemia, and fewer children had increased CRP levels attributable to parasitemia. The levels of malaria-attributable CRP appear to track the acquisition of parasitological and clinical tolerance in this area with very high levels of P. falciparum transmission. Determination of CRP levels should be useful in the rapid assessment of the overall burden of morbidity, especially in infants. In areas where malaria is endemic, CRP associated with increased parasite densities provides an objective measure of malaria-specific morbidity. This would be an efficient approach to estimating malaria morbidity risks from small-scale serological surveys.
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PMID:Do high levels of C-reactive protein in Tanzanian children indicate malaria morbidity. 855 82


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