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

An analysis of records of 494 malaria patients admitted to the General Hospital in Colombo (the capital of Sri Lanka where malaria transmission is not known to occur) from 1981 to 1984 is presented and compared with national malaria data from the entire country. The incidence of predominantly Plasmodium vivax malaria rose sharply over the 3 years; its species distribution and seasonal variation in patients in the General Hospital, Colombo (GHC) generally reflected the disease pattern in the country as a whole. The disease had spread from mainly the endemic dry zone to the non-endemic wet zone. Malaria patients at the GHC were mainly residents of Colombo who had acquired malaria during brief visits to endemic areas, and we have demonstrated how information from them can be used as a sampling method to obtain almost immediate epidemiological information from the whole country. Based on the histories of selected patients we deduced the incubation periods and possible relapse patterns of P. vivax infections in Sri Lanka. This study also provided an insight to the epidemiology of the disease in the city.
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PMID:A metropolitan hospital in a non-endemic area provides a sampling pool for epidemiological studies on vivax malaria in Sri Lanka. 331 15

A case of Plasmodium vivax malaria in an eight-week-old infant in Colombo is documented, with epidemiological and circumstantial evidence which strongly supports a transplacental route of infection. The malarial antibody levels detected by the indirect fluorescent antibody technique in both mother and child are discussed in terms of the present epidemiological pattern of malaria in the country. We also comment on the species incidence of congenital malaria, this case being the first caused by P. vivax in Sri Lanka, despite this species being more prevalent than P. falciparum which has been reported in six previous cases of congenital malaria in Sri Lanka.
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PMID:Congenital malaria due to Plasmodium vivax: a case report from Sri Lanka. 704 5

Following progressive reduction in confirmed cases of malaria from 2002 to 2007 (41,411 cases in 2002, 10,510 cases in 2003, 3,720 cases in 2004, 1,640 cases in 2005, 591 cases in 2006, and 198 cases in 2007). Sri Lanka entered the pre-elimination stage of malaria in 2008. One case of indigenous malaria and four other cases of imported malaria are highlighted here, as the only patients who presented to the Professorial Medical Unit, Colombo North Teaching Hospital, Ragama, Sri Lanka over the past eight years, in contrast to treating several patients a week about a decade ago. Therefore, at the eve of elimination of malaria from Sri Lanka, it is likely that the infection is mostly encountered among travellers who return from endemic areas, or among the military who serve in un-cleared areas of Northern Sri Lanka. They may act as potential sources of introducing malaria as until malaria eradication is carried out. These cases highlight that change in the symptomatology, forgetfulness regarding malaria as a cause of acute febrile illness and deterioration of the competency of microscopists as a consequence of the low disease incidence, which are all likely to contribute to the delay in the diagnosis. The importance regarding awareness of new malaria treatment regimens, treatment under direct observation, prompt notification of suspected or diagnosed cases of malaria and avoiding blind use of anti-malarials are among the other responsibilities expected of all clinicians who manage patients in countries reaching malaria elimination.
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PMID:What clinicians who practice in countries reaching malaria elimination should be aware of: lessons learnt from recent experience in Sri Lanka. 2199 36

Malaria is a global public health concern and its dynamic transmission is still a complex process. Malaria transmission largely depends on various factors, including demography, geography, vector dynamics, parasite reservoir, and climate. The dynamic behaviour of malaria transmission has been explained using various statistical and mathematical methods. Of them, wavelet analysis is a powerful mathematical technique used in analysing rapidly changing time-series to understand disease processes in a more holistic way. The current study is aimed at identifying the pattern of malaria transmission and its variability with environmental factors in Kataragama, a malaria-endemic dry zone locality of Sri Lanka, using a wavelet approach. Monthly environmental data including total rainfall and mean water flow of the "Menik Ganga" river; mean temperature, mean minimum and maximum temperatures and mean relative humidity; and malaria cases in the Kataragama Medical Officer of Health (MOH) area were obtained from the Department of Irrigation, Department of Meteorology and Malaria Research Unit (MRU) of University of Colombo, respectively, for the period 1990 to 2005. Wavelet theory was applied to analyze these monthly time series data. There were two significant periodicities in malaria cases during the period of 1992-1995 and 1999-2000. The cross-wavelet power spectrums revealed an anti-phase correlation of malaria cases with mean temperature, minimum temperature, and water flow of "Menik Ganga" river during the period 1991-1995, while the in-phase correlation with rainfall is noticeable only during 1991-1992. Relative humidity was similarly associated with malaria cases between 1991-1992. It appears that environmental variables have contributed to a higher incidence of malaria cases in Kataragama in different time periods between 1990 and 2005.
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PMID:Assessment of environmental variability on malaria transmission in a malaria-endemic rural dry zone locality of Sri Lanka: The wavelet approach. 3208 56