Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Clinical features


Typical malaria is seen in non-immune individuals. This includes children in any area, adults in hypoendemic areas, and any visitors from a non-malarious region.
the normal incubation period is 10-21 days, but can be longer. The most common symptom is fever, although malaria may present initially with general malaise, headache, vomiting, or diarrhoea. At first the fever may be continual or erratic: the classical tertian or quartan fever only appears after some days. The temperature often reaches 41°C, and is accompanied by rigors and drenching sweats.


P. vivax or P. ovale infection
The illness is relatively mild. Anaemia develops slowly, and there may be tender hepatosplenomegaly. Spontaneous recovery usually occurs within 2-6 weeks, but hypnozoites in the liver can cause relapses for many years after infection. Repeated infections often cause chronic ill health due to anaemia and hyperreactive splenomegaly.


P. malariae infection
This also causes a relatively mild illness, but tends to run a more chronic course. Parasitaemia may persist for years, with or without symptoms. In children, P. malariae infection is associated with glomerulonephritis and nephrotic syndrome.
This causes, in many cases, a self-limiting illness similar to the other types of malaria, although the paroxysms of fever are usually less marked. However it may also cause serious complications and the vast majority of malaria deaths are due to P. falciparum. Patients can deteriorate rapidly, and children in particular progress from reasonable health to coma and death within hours. A high parasitaemia (> 1% of red cells infected) is an indicator of severe disease, although patients with apparently low parasite levels may also develop complications. Cerebral malaria is marked by diminished consciousness, confusion, and convulsions, often progressing to coma and death. Untreated it is universally fatal. Blackwater fever is due to widespread intravascular haemolysis, affecting both parasitized and unparasitized red cells, giving rise to dark urine.


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