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For further information, see CMDT Part 35-04: Malaria
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Essentials of Diagnosis
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Exposure to anopheline mosquitoes in a malaria-endemic area
Intermittent attacks of chills, fever, and sweating
Headache, myalgia, vomiting, splenomegaly; anemia, thrombocytopenia
Intraerythrocytic parasites identified in thick or thin blood smears or positive rapid diagnostic tests
Complications of falciparum malaria, including
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General Considerations
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Four species of the genus Plasmodium are responsible for human malaria
P vivax
P malariae
P ovale
P falciparum
Mode of transmission
P falciparum is responsible for nearly all severe disease
P vivax seldom causes severe disease
P ovale and P malariae generally do not cause severe illness
Plasmodium knowlesi
A parasite of macaque monkeys
Causes illnesses in humans, including some severe disease, in Southeast Asia
For all plasmodial species, parasites may recrudesce following initial clinical improvement after suboptimal therapy
Disease and response to therapy are dramatically affected by immune status
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Causes hundreds of millions of cases and hundreds of thousands of deaths each year
Disease is endemic in most of the tropics, including
Transmission, morbidity, and mortality are greatest in Africa
Disease also common in travelers from nonendemic areas
Groups at particular risk for severe malaria
Children
Pregnant women
HIV-infected persons
Nonimmune travelers
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Typically begins with a prodrome of headache and fatigue, followed by fever (usually irregular)
Without therapy, however, fevers may become regular, especially with non-falciparum disease
Headache, malaise
Myalgias, arthralgias
Cough
Chest pain, abdominal pain
Anorexia, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea
Seizures may represent simple febrile convulsions or evidence of severe neurologic disease
Physical findings may be absent or include signs of
Anemia
Jaundice
Splenomegaly
Mild hepatomegaly
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Characterized by signs of severe illness, organ dysfunction, or a high parasite load (peripheral parasitemia > 5% or > 200,000 parasites/mcL)
Principally a result of P falciparum infection
Can include dysfunction of any system, including
Neurologic abnormalities progressing to alterations in consciousness, repeated seizures, and coma (cerebral malaria)
Severe anemia
Hypotension and shock
Noncardiogenic pulmonary edema and the acute respiratory distress syndrome
Acute kidney injury (due to acute tubular necrosis or, less commonly, severe hemolysis)
Hypoglycemia
Acidosis
Hemolysis with jaundice
Hepatic dysfunction
Retinal hemorrhages and other fundoscopic abnormalities
Bleeding abnormalities, including disseminated intravascular coagulation
Secondary bacterial infections, including pneumonia and Salmonella bacteremia
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