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Malaria

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Malaria Tintinalli s Chap. 148 In General It is a protozoan disease caused by the bite of the Anopheles mosquito. Four species of the Plasmodium genus infect ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Malaria


1
Malaria
  • Tintinallis Chap. 148

2
In General
  • It is a protozoan disease caused by the bite of
    the Anopheles mosquito.
  • Four species of the Plasmodium genus infect
    humans.(P.Vivax, P.Ovale, P.Malariae,
    P.Falciparum)
  • P.Falciparum is the most deadly, and is becoming
    increasingly resistant to antimalarial
    medications.

3
In General
  • Transmission occurs in greater portions of
    Central and South America, the Caribbean, sub
    Saharan Africa, the Indian subcontinent,
    Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and Oceania.
  • Any patient returning from the tropics with an
    unexplained fever should be suspected.

4
Pathophysiology
  • The anopheline (female) mosquito bites releasing
    sporozoites into the hosts blood which are
    carried to liver.
  • Asexual reproduction begins in hepatic
    parenchymal cells, and they rupture.
  • Merozoites (daughters) are released and invade
    erythrocytes.

5
Pathophysiology
  • They mature in the erythrocytes into trophozoites
    and schizonts until the cell lyses and the cycle
    continues.
  • Several cycles later, the merozoites develop into
    sexual gametocytes which later develop into
    sporozoites which can infect another host.

6
Pathophysiology
  • P. Falciparum, P.Vivax, P.Ovale, and P.Malariae
    differ in(see table 148-2)
  • Incubation period
  • Reproduction time
  • RBC preference
  • Morphologic features

7
Pathophysiology
  • The asexual intraerythrocytic parasite causes the
    symptoms and pathophysiologic consequences.
  • It can be transmitted by direct transfusion of
    infected blood or transplacentally from mother to
    fetus.

8
Clinical Features
  • Prodrome of malaise, myalgia, headache, low grade
    fevers, and chills
  • Some may have cough, chest pain, abdominal pain,
    arthralgia or diarrhea.
  • Eventually, the patient may have severe chills,
    high grade fevers, tachycardia, nausea,
    orthostatic dizziness, and weakness.

9
Physical Exam
  • Pts appear acutely ill with high fevers,
    tachycardia tachypnea
  • Splenomegaly
  • Tender abdomen
  • Liver enlargement
  • Lymphadenopathy
  • Maculopapular rash

10
Labs
  • Normochromic normocytic anemia (hemolysis)
  • Normal or mildly depressed leukocyte count
  • Thrombocytopenia
  • Elevated ESR
  • Elevated LDH
  • Liver and renal function abnormalities
  • Hyponatremia, hypoglycemia
  • False pos. VDRL

11
Complications
  • Splenic enlargement, or rupture
  • Autoimmune glomerulonephritis
  • Cerebral malaria
  • Respiratory failure
  • Lactic acidosis
  • Profound hypoglycemia

12
Diagnosis
  • Giemsa stained thick and thin blood smears to
    view parasites
  • At certain stages of the infection the parasites
    may be undetectable.
  • If suspicious of malaria, failure to see the
    parasites on the stain is not a reason to not
    treat.

13
Diagnosis
  • To exclude malaria completely, repeated smears
    should be done twice daily for two to three days.
  • To determine prognosis look for degree of
    parasitemia and whether P. Falciparum is present.

14
P. Falciparum
  • Look for small ring forms with double chromatin
    knobs within erythrocyte, and crescent shaped
    gametocyte.
  • This should be managed in a hospital setting.

15
Treatment
  • Most cases can be handled in an ambulatory
    setting.
  • Those that should be hospitalized include those
    infected with P.Falciparum, infants, pregnant
    women, those with significant chronic medical
    problems.

16
Treatment
  • Uncomplicated infection with P.Vivax, P.Ovale,
    P.Malariae and Chloroquine sensitive
    P.Falciparum
  • Chloroquine phosphate plus Primaquine phosphate
  • See Table 148-4 for dosing schedules






17
Treatment
  • Uncomplicated infection with chloroquine
    resistant P.Falciparum
  • Quinine sulfate plus doxycycline plus or minus
    Pyrimethamine Sulfadoxine
  • Or, Mefloquine plus doxycycline or
    Atovaquone-Proguanil

18
Treatment
  • Complicated infection with chloroquine resistant
    P.Falciparum
  • Quinidine Gluconate plus Doxycycline
  • See table 148-5 for side affects of meds
  • Parasite should decrease within 24-48hrs.
  • No asexual forms should be detected 3-4 days
    after treatment.
  • Gametocytes may persistent, but do not mean
    treatment failure.

19
Treatment
  • Clinical relapses usually occur unless Primaquine
    is used.
  • Primaquine should not be given to those that are
    glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficient.
  • Primaquine is not needed with P.Falciparum due to
    the absence of dormant asexual forms in the liver.

20
Prevention
  • Anti-mosquito measures
  • Antimalarial drugs
  • Pyrethrum containing insect spray
  • Insect repellent containing DEET
  • Appropriate chemoprophylaxis (see table 148-6)
  • Malaria vaccines are still in trials
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