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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (
malaria
)
44,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In the U.S.,
malaria
predominately occurs in travelers and immigrants. We report a series of 40 cases at West Virginia University Hospital, and 24 of whom were students who had visited areas of East Africa, West Africa and Asia usually in either December, January, August or September. Most patients (79%) reported a previous episode of
malaria
, and P. falciparum was identified in 60%. Fever,
chills
and rigors were the most common symptoms. Correct use of
malaria
prophylaxis was recorded in five patients, and only two of these were students. Successful outcomes were recorded in all but one patient. Our series suggests that international students would benefit from the proper use of chemoprophylaxis, thus decreasing the number of cases of
malaria
seen in university settings.
...
PMID:Malaria in West Virginia: forty cases seen at West Virginia University Hospital. 964 Oct 71
Clinical Confusion between human babesiosis and
malaria
is often reported in the literature. Headache, fever,
chills
, nausea, vomiting, myalgia, altered mental status, disseminated intravascular coagulation, anaemia with dyserythropoiesis, hypotension, respiratory distress, and renal insufficiency are common to both diseases. This remarkable similarity is not restricted to the human host. In the mouse, for example, the histological changes wrought by fatal
malaria
(Plasmodium vinckei) and babesiosis (Babesia rhodaini) are identical, and parasites of both genera cross-protect. Malarial disease pathogenesis is now generally associated with excessive production of pro-inflammatory cytokines , such as tumour necrosis factor. While this concept has not yet been examined in babesiosis, indirect evidence arises from noting the parasite density at which illness occurs in primary infections caused by either organism. Naive mice tolerate high loads of malarial or babesial parasites before they become ill, and are also tolerant to endotoxicity, which is mediated by these same cytokines. In contrast, humans require very much smaller loads of Plasmodium or Babesia spp. before becoming ill, and likewise are very sensitive to endotoxin, the harmful effects of which are mediated by the pro-inflammatory cytokines. For these reasons, as discussed in this review, the diseases caused by these two genera of intra-erythrocytic protozoan parasites will probably prove to be conceptually identical.
...
PMID:Do babesiosis and malaria share a common disease process? 968 99
We report on our investigation of a
malaria
outbreak in Honduras, Central America, in January 1997. We tested 202 patients with fever and
chills
using thin and thick blood film microscopy. Sixteen patients lived in the city and the rest lived in rural areas. A total of 95 samples (47%) were positive for
malaria
parasites. Seventy-nine percent (63/80) of the rural patients were infected with Plasmodium vivax and 21% (17/80) were infected with P. falciparum. In the urban area, all 15 infected patients had P. vivax
malaria
and none showed evidence of P. falciparum. Since previous reports indicate that falciparum
malaria
accounts for only 2% of the overall
malaria
infections in Honduras, the results reported here suggest that there is a dramatic increase in falciparum
malaria
in the area of Honduras investigated in this study.
...
PMID:Increased prevalence of Plasmodium falciparum malaria in Honduras, Central America. 973 27
Six patients with severe and complicated falciparum
malaria
(6.7 +/- 2.7 WHO criteria) were admitted to our Intensive Care Unit. All patients acquired the disease while travelling in tropical Africa without appropriate chemoprophylaxis. The clinical manifestations included hyperpyrexia (all patients),
chills
(4), sweating (2), asthenia (3), anorexia (2), headache (1), arthralgias (1), vomiting (4), diarrhoea or abdominal discomfort (3), jaundice (2) and disturbances of consciousness (4). All patients had anemia, thrombocytopenia, hyponatremia, hypoproteinemia, hypoalbuminemia, hypocalcemia and acute renal failure, in one case associated with anuria. A low grade parasitemia was observed in two patients and a high grade parasitemia (20%-58% of erythrocytes) in four. Exchange transfusion was performed only in high parasitemic patients and all of them survived. All patients were treated with quinine, a sulfonamide and pyrimethamine. Additionally, five patients received oxytetracycline, doxycycline or clindamycin. Three patients required hemodyalisis. Five patients had delirium, coma or seizures. All patients had at least one sign of hepatic impairment: liver enlargement, jaundice or increased bilirubin or aminotransferase levels. Two patients had spleen enlargement. Laboratory findings suggested disseminated intravascular coagulation in four patients. Four patients developed pulmonary changes and three of them required mechanical ventilation. A Swan-Ganz catheter was placed in four patients. In three of them (two with pulmonary edema) the pulmonary capillary wedge pressure was initially increased, which suggested a cardiogenic or hypervolemia mechanism, but soon returned to normal level. One patient with low grade parasitemia died because of adult respiratory distress syndrome after 18 days. In our series, the degree of parasitemia was not related to the severity of the disease.
...
PMID:[Severe and complicated malaria. Report of six cases]. 977 80
The clinical presentation of
malaria
is, in most of cases, a
malaria
attack. It occurs in 90% of imported cases in France within 30 days after return of endemic area. Characteristic
malaria
paroxism have three stages:
chills
, high fever (> 39 degrees C) and sweating stage. In this typical form, parasitaemia is easily disclosed. With the increasing spread of chemoresistance P. falciparum strains, many patients experience non specific symptoms before the onset of paroxysm, often complaining of malaise, headaches, myalgias and anorexia. In some cases temperature did not exceed 38 degrees C and physical examination revealed sometimes liver or splenic enlargement. These atypical presentations can masquerade other diseases such as a viral illness. In those patients blood smears were often negative and
malaria
diagnosis is carried out only by QBC or parasight test. Treatment of
malaria
attack needs antimalarial drugs effective against chemoresistant P. falciparum strains. Mefloquine of halofantrine can be delivered with the respect of guidelines prescription, given major side effects observed with these drugs (neuropsychiatric disorders with mefloquine and cardiac arrhythmias with halofantrine). Oral quinine sulfate can be used when the above drugs are not allowed.
...
PMID:[Simple malaria attack]. 978 Oct 73
The authors carried out an epidemiological survey from october 12 to december 4, 1995, at Medina's mother and Child care centre (MCC) in Dakar in order to assess chemoprophylaxis among pregnant women in Dakar. The midwife/pregnant women ratio is 0.08 The mentioned diagnosis criteria were relevant regards to the references established for most of the answers because since the latter base
malaria
diagnosis on the following signs: fever,
chills
, headaches and vomiting. 64.6% of them assume compliance to antimalarial chemoporphylaxis. Education level seems to be the main determining factor in this trend. Although chloroquine is the most widely used drug, nevertheless 11.9% of pregnant women assuming compliance use it at inappropriate posology. Besides, pyrimethamine is used by 12.3% of them. 34% of pregnant women do show chloroquine in urine. The plasmodial index is 1.4%. Only 8.1% of these women are supplied by health centres where shortages are noted.
...
PMID:[Evaluation of malaria chemoprevention among 359 pregnant women attending a health center in Dakar]. 982 26
The records of 20 children with imported
malaria
admitted to Kings County Hospital between October 1987 and May 1995 were reviewed. All had a history of recent travel or immigration from a
malaria
endemic area (West-Africa [16], Central-America [three], and the Caribbean [one]). None of the 10 children with a travel history received appropriate
malaria
chemoprophylaxis. The most common symptoms and signs were daily fever,
chills
, and hepatomegaly. Diagnosis was delayed in seven children who were initially felt to have pharyngitis or viral syndrome. Common laboratory findings were anemia and thrombocytopenia. P. falciparum was identified in 70% of the patients. Other species were P. malariae and P. vivax. Complications occurred in six children, hyponatremia in five, seizures in three, and cerebral
malaria
in one patient. The high incidence of chloroquine-resistant
malaria
makes chemoprophylaxis difficult in children. The clinical presentation of
malaria
is nonspecific, and diagnostic delays occur, so a high index of suspicion is needed in children with a travel history.
...
PMID:Pediatric imported malaria in New York: delayed diagnosis. 1037 90
A total of 405 cases of fever who were either admitted to the Hospital or attended in paediatric out patient Department or Emergency of Medical College Hospital, Calcutta between January '95 and November '95 were included in the study. Majority of cases presented with usual features of
malaria
like fever with
chill
and rigor, hepatosplenomegaly, pallor. Apart from these, complicated manifestations like shock, convulsion D.I.C and jaundice were also observed. Some unusual presentations with severe diarrhoea, dehydration and features like that of acute viral respiratory tract infection were highly confusing in terms of clinical diagnosis. P. falciparum was observed in 35.5% of cases. Overall therapeutic response to chloroquin was good, However, two patients died of cerebral
Malaria
. Five cases of severe
malaria
were caused by P. vivax however, other etiological features could not be found to attribute the severe nature of these illnesses.
...
PMID:Resurgence of malaria in Calcutta in 1995: a hospital based study. 1038 10
There are special considerations when performing cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) on a patient with
malaria
. A 70-year-old female with a recent history of severe aortic stenosis was scheduled to undergo elective aortic valve replacement. One week prior to surgery, the patient developed shaking
chills
and fever, with a positive
malaria
smear. An extensive literature search was undertaken to determine the effect of CPB on a patient with active
malaria
, but no prior reference was found. One major concern was the lysis of red blood cells while on bypass. The surgery was performed uneventfully, following 2 weeks of treatment with primaquine phosphate.
...
PMID:Cardiopulmonary bypass on a patient with malaria. 1041 Dec 53
Malaria
is no longer endemic in Puerto Rico, however, imported cases of the disease are occasionally reported to the Health Department of the Island. This is a report of a 45-year-old female patient who traveled to Kenya and Niger and was admitted to a San Juan area hospital with an 8 day history of daily
chills
and fever, myalgia, nausea and vomiting. Upon admission, peripheral blood displayed multiple intra-erythrocytic ring-shape trophozoites, highly suggestive of Plasmodium falciparum. The polymerase chain reaction was used as a complementary method for the detection of
malaria
parasites and confirmation of post-treatment parasite clearance. This report presents an imported case of
malaria
in Puerto Rico and showed the use of a molecular technique to diagnose Plasmodium.
...
PMID:Diagnosis of malaria by polymerase chain reaction. 1046 15
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