Table of contents | |
Introduction | |
Plasmodium - Vertical Transmission | |
Plasmodium - Pathogenicity | |
Plasmodium - Complications | |
Cerebral Malaria | |
Severe Malaria - Management | |
Plasmodium - Lab diagnosis |
Nearly all cases of malaria in humans are attributed to six species within the Plasmodium genus. These include P. falciparum, P. vivax, two morphologically identical sympatric species of P. ovale (curtisi and wallikeri), P. malariae, and, in Southeast Asia, the simian malaria parasite P. knowlesi.
Man-Intermediate host
Female anopheles mosquito-Definitive host
Infective stage to man-Sporozoite
Infective stage to mosquito-Gametocytes
Relapse-Hypnozoites
Clinical manifestations-merozoites
It invades all stages of red blood cells (RBCs) at notably high parasite densities. P. vivax and P. ovale exhibit a distinct preference for young RBCs, while P. malariae tends to infect older cells. These species result in a parasitemia level that rarely surpasses 2%.
The pathogenesis of falciparum is intricately linked to the central mechanisms of cytoadherence, resetting, and agglutination.
The majority of severe or complicated malaria cases are caused by P. falciparum; however, there is a growing number of recent reports indicating severe disease attributed to P. vivax.
Falciparum Malaria complications:
CHAPLIN
C - Cerebral malaria
H - Hypoglycemia
A - Anemia
P - Pulmonary edema
L - Lactic acidosis
I - Infections
N - Necrosis of renal tubules
High-grade fever with stupor - Differential Diagnosis:
It presents as a diffuse symmetric encephalopathy, with uncommon occurrence of focal neurologic signs.
The onset can be either gradual or sudden, often following a convulsion.
Convulsions typically manifest as generalized tonic-clonic and may be recurrent.
Symptoms of meningeal irritation are generally not observed.
Muscle tone may exhibit either an increase or decrease.
Neurological impairments such as hemiplegia, cerebral palsy, cortical blindness, deafness, and cognitive and language deficits are predominantly reported in children.
Management
Managing severe malaria requires supportive measures, ideally administered in a critical care unit. This entails addressing elevated body temperatures and potential seizures. Additionally, monitoring for inadequate respiratory effort, low blood sugar, and diminished blood potassium levels is crucial.
Antimalarials
Severe Falciparum Malaria:
Hyperpyrexia - Employ tepid sponging, fanning, and paracetamol to facilitate defervescence. Avoid the use of aspirin and other NSAIDs due to the potential risk of gastrointestinal bleeding.
Cerebral malaria:
Anemia - Administer packed cell transfusion if hemoglobin is <5 g/dl or in the presence of impaired consciousness, hyperparasitemia, respiratory distress, or metabolic acidosis. If fluid overload is present, use diuretics and transfuse slowly; perform exchange transfusion in patients with overt congestive cardiac failure.
Hypoglycemia - Administer 1 ml/kg of 50% glucose slowly intravenously, followed by infusion of 10% dextrose; closely monitor blood sugar levels; consider octreotide and glucagon if intravenous fluids are restricted.
Metabolic acidosis - Correct hypovolemia, hypoglycemia, and anemia; provide oxygen; slowly administer sodium bicarbonate if pH is <7.
Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation (DIC) - Administer Vitamin K, fresh frozen plasma, and/or cryoprecipitate; consider exchange transfusion in the presence of fluid overload.
Renal failure - Perform a careful fluid challenge with 20 ml/kg of normal saline, followed by furosemide 1 mg/kg (max 5 mg/kg) if no response is noted; restrict fluid intake; consider dialysis if refractory hyperkalemia or metabolic acidosis, fluid overload, and a rapid rise in serum creatinine are present.
Hemolysis - Consider artemisinin derivatives as antimalarial drugs; transfuse packed cells to maintain hematocrit; monitor urine output and renal function for the need for dialytic support.
Acute respiratory distress syndrome - Caused by pulmonary capillary leak and, less commonly, fluid overload; administer oxygen; position the patient in a propped-up position; restrict fluid intake; use loop diuretics if necessary; severe cases may require mechanical ventilation with high peak end-expiratory pressure.
Shock - Obtain blood cultures and administer broad-spectrum antibiotics (e.g., cefotaxime and amikacin); monitor central venous pressure; replace fluids; administer vasopressors and respiratory support as required.
Hyperparasitemia - Consider exchange transfusion.
If a patient from a malaria-endemic region or exhibiting fever is encountered, prompt preparation and examination of thick and thin blood smears are crucial to confirm the diagnosis and determine the infecting parasite species. Typically, if an experienced microscopist finds the blood smear negative, it suggests the absence of malaria. In cases where reliable microscopy is unavailable, conducting a rapid test is recommended.
The primary and crucial approach for diagnosing malaria involves detecting the presence of the parasite in the blood.
Note:
Quantitative Estimation
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1. What is Plasmodium and how is it transmitted vertically? |
2. How does Plasmodium cause disease and what are its pathogenic effects? |
3. What are the complications associated with Plasmodium infection? |
4. What is cerebral malaria and why is it considered a serious complication? |
5. How is severe malaria managed and what are the treatment options? |
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