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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (
malaria
)
44,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
There is limited data regarding the efficacy of prophylaxis with atovaquone/proguanil (A/P) against non-falciparum
malaria
in travelers. Two cases, one Plasmodium vivax infection and another
Plasmodium ovale infection
, in travelers despite A/P prophylaxis are presented.
...
PMID:Tertian malaria (Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium ovale) in two travelers despite atovaquone-proguanil prophylaxis. 1710 31
Lung involvement in
malaria
has been recognized for more than 200 hundred years, yet our knowledge of its pathogenesis and management is limited. Pulmonary edema is the most severe form of lung involvement. Increased alveolar capillary permeability leading to intravascular fluid loss into the lungs is the main pathophysiologic mechanism. This defines
malaria
as another cause of acute lung injury (ALI) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS).Pulmonary edema has been described most often in non-immune individuals with Plasmodium falciparum infections as part of a severe systemic illness or as the main feature of acute
malaria
. P.vivax and
P.ovale
have also rarely caused pulmonary edema.Clinically, patients usually present with acute breathlessness that can rapidly progress to respiratory failure either at disease presentation or, interestingly, after treatment when clinical improvement is taking place and the parasitemia is falling. Pregnant women are particularly prone to developing pulmonary edema. Optimal management of
malaria
-induced ALI/ARDS includes early recognition and diagnosis.
Malaria
must always be suspected in a returning traveler or a visitor from a
malaria
-endemic country with an acute febrile illness. Slide microscopy and/or the use of rapid antigen tests are standard diagnostic tools.
Malaria
must be treated with effective drugs, but current choices are few: e.g. parenteral artemisinins, intravenous quinine or quinidine (in the US only). A recent trial in adults has shown that intravenous artesunate reduces severe
malaria
mortality by a third compared with adults treated with intravenous quinine. Respiratory compromise should be managed on its merits and may require mechanical ventilation.Patients should be managed in an intensive care unit and particular attention should be paid to the energetic management of other severe
malaria
complications, notably coma and acute renal failure. ALI/ARDS may also be related to a coincidental bacterial sepsis that may not be clinically obvious. Clinicians should employ a low threshold for starting broad spectrum antibacterials in such patients, after taking pertinent microbiologic specimens. Despite optimal management, the prognosis of severe
malaria
with ARDS is poor.ALI/ARDS in pediatric
malaria
appears to be rare. However, falciparum
malaria
with severe metabolic acidosis or acute pulmonary edema may present with a clinical picture of pneumonia, i.e. with tachypnea, intercostal recession, wheeze or inspiratory crepitations. This results in diagnostic confusion and suboptimal treatment. Whilst this is increasingly being recognized in
malaria
-endemic countries, clinicians in temperate zones should be aware that
malaria
may be a possible cause of 'pneumonia' in a visiting or returning child.
...
PMID:Pulmonary manifestations of malaria : recognition and management. 1715 71
46year old female presented with a one week history of high grade fever, chills, cough, and severe nausea. The patient had been admitted a month earlier with severe lower gastrointestinal bleeding from hemorrhoids necessitating transfusion of 7 units of packed red blood cells. Initial work-up was unremarkable. Because of persistent symptoms, the patient was admitted 2 days later.
Malaria
smear was positive. Due to the severity of her symptoms, she was managed as falciparum
malaria
and was started on intravenous quinine and oral doxycycline. On the second day of treatment the patient developed respiratory failure, requiring intubation and ventilatory support with new bilateral pulmonary infiltrates. Antimalarial treatment was continued for a total of 7 days followed by primaquine for 14 days once the blood smear results revealed
Plasmodium ovale infection
. The patient remained intubated in the intensive care unit (ICU) for 16 days, and was later extubated successfully with a clear chest x-ray after a total of one month hospitalization. To our knowledge, this is the first case of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) secondary to blood transfusion related P. ovale
malaria
infection in a non-endemic country.
...
PMID:Transfusion-related Plasmodium ovale malaria complicated by acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) in a non-endemic country. 2097 Dec 12
Malaria
includes a global disease burden with approximately 300-500 million cases worldwide annually. Varied symptomatology creates a diagnostic challenge. This is a case report of a stroke rehabilitation facility resident who developed
Plasmodium ovale infection
, several months post-exposure. Physicians should maintain a broad list of differential diagnoses, thinking beyond the range of common diagnoses.
...
PMID:'Not another UTI ... '. 2241 82
Malaria
is a vector-borne infection caused by unicellular parasite of the genus Plasmodium. Plasmodia are obligate intracellular parasites that are able to infect and replicate within the erythrocytes after a clinically silent replication phase in the liver. Four species (P.falciparum, P.malariae,
P.ovale
and P.vivax) are traditionally recognized as responsible of natural infection in human beings but the recent upsurge of P.knowlesi
malaria
in South-East Asia has led clinicians to consider it as the fifth human
malaria
parasite. Recent studies in wild-living apes in Africa have revealed that P.falciparum, the most deadly form of human
malaria
, is not only human-host restricted as previously believed and its phylogenetic lineage is much more complex with new species identified in gorilla, bonobo and chimpanzee. Although less impressive, new data on biology of P.malariae,
P.ovale
and P.vivax are also emerging and will be briefly discussed in this review.
...
PMID:Biology of human malaria plasmodia including Plasmodium knowlesi. 2255 May 59
The authors report the first indigenous case of
Plasmodium ovale infection
from Bangladesh. The diagnosis was confirmed by PCR and sequence analysis. The patient had neither been outside of the country nor ever received blood transfusions. The authors concluded that there was evidence for a local transmission of P ovale
malaria
in Bangladesh. P ovale
malaria
should therefore always be considered a potential differential diagnosis in the indigenous population as well as travellers and migrants returning from South Asia, possibly up to years after their return.
...
PMID:The first case of Plasmodium ovale malaria from Bangladesh. 2277 71
The first imported case of
Plasmodium ovale infection
in Guangdong Province was identified. The patient worked in Myanmar for one week and had a fever when he arrived at Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport. Epidemiological information and blood sample were collected. The detection was conducted by microscopy, right VIEW rapid
malaria
test (RDTs) and real-time PCR with Plasmodium genus-specific and species-specific primers and probes. The case showed weak positive RDT result, and was confirmed as P. ovale infection by microscopy and real-time PCR. After treatment with artemether, his symptoms improved.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis of the first imported case of Plasmodium ovale infection at Guangdong Port]. 2506 19
The Mesoamerican Ministers of Health have set 2020 as the target for
malaria
elimination to be achieved in the region. Imported
malaria
cases are a potential threat to countries attempting elimination or working to prevent resurgence. We report the first imported
Plasmodium ovale infection
with molecular confirmation in Central America, which occurred in a Guatemalan soldier that had been deployed in Africa. The obstacles for its diagnosis using the standard microscopy technique and the need to improve its detection are discussed.
...
PMID:First imported Plasmodium ovale malaria in Central America: case report of a Guatemalan soldier and a call to improve its accurate diagnosis. 2572 82
An imported case previously misdiagnosed as vivax
malaria
was reviewed. The epidemiological data and blood sample were collected. The detection was conducted by microscopy, rapid diagnostic test (RDT) and nested PCR. The case was finally comfirmed as the first imported case of
Plasmodium ovale infection
in Nanping.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis of an Imported Case of Plasmodium ovale Infection in Nanping City, Fujian]. 2608 May 33
Plasmodium knowlesi is now added to the known four Plasmodium species (P.vivax, P.falciparum, P.malariae,
P.ovale
) as a cause of
malaria
in humans because of the recent increasing rate of cases reported from countries of southeastern Asia. P.knowlesi which infects macaque monkeys (Macaca fascicularis and M.nemestrina) is transmitted to humans especially by Anopheles leucosphyrus and An.hackeri mosquitos. First human cases of P.knowlesi
malaria
have been detected in Malaysia which have reached high numbers in recent years and also have been reported from countries of Southeast Asia such as Thailand, Philippines, Myanmar, Singapore and Vietnam. However the number of cases reported from western countries are rare and limited only within voyagers. This report is the first presentation of an imported case of P.knowlesi
malaria
in Turkey and aims to draw attention to the point that it could also be detected in future. A 33-year-old male patient from Myanmar who has migrated to Turkey as a refugee, was admitted to a health center with the complaints of fever with a periodicity of 24 hours, headache, fatigue, cough, sore throat, anorexia, myalgia and arthralgia. He was prediagnosed as upper respiratory tract infection, however because of his periodical fever and background in Myanmar, thick and thin blood films were prepared and sent to our laboratory for further examinations. Microscopic examination of the thin blood films revealed erythrocytic stages compatible with P.knowlesi (three large early trophozoites in an erythrocyte, three late trophozoites with compact view, and three late band-form trophozoites). Upon this, both real-time polymerase chain reaction (Rt-PCR) targeting the small subunit ribosomal RNA (SSU-rRNA) genes of Plasmodium genus and DNA sequence analysis targeting P.knowlesi rRNA gene were performed. As a result, the suspected identification of P.knowlesi by microscopy was confirmed by Rt-PCR and DNA sequencing. The patient was treated with chloroquine and primaquine combination and in the follow-up on the seventh day after the treatment, his parasitemia and symptoms had ceased. Although there were some previous reports concerning about imported patients infected with different Plasmodium species in our country, no cases of P.knowlesi have been reported. This first case presented here emphasizes the occurence of P.knowlesi
malaria
in Turkey hereinafter due to the increasing number of refugees.
...
PMID:[The first monkey malaria in Turkey: a case of Plasmodium knowlesi]. 2752 5
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