EAP 2019 Congress and MasterCourse

The Clinicopathologic Manifestations of Plasmodium Vivax Malaria in Children

author.DisplayName 1 author.DisplayName 2
1Pediatrics, SGRRIM&HS, India
2Pediatrics, TMMC&RC, India

Background: Plasmodium vivax is generally benign and complications leading to significant morbidity and mortality are uncommon,but in recent times it is being seen increasingly as complicated disease in various manifestations. Studies done on this increasing virulence of P. Vivax in children, are very rare.

Aims: This study was done with the intention of finding out spectrum of severe malaria complications which are associated with P.vivax in children. Patients with mixed malarial infection were excluded by appropriate tests, to improve the diagnostic accuracy. The present study was focused on the paediatric population with a sample size of 30 subjects.

Settings and Design: This was an observational retrospective analysis of the clinicopathologic manifestations of the Paediatric cases which were admitted with severe malaria due to a mono-infection with Plasmodium vivax, in a tertiary-care centre in the Moradabad , Uttarpradesh, India.

Methods and Material: The diagnosis of the mono-infection with P. Vivax malaria was established by making peripheral blood films (PBFs) or by doing rapid diagnostic tests or by both methods . The severe forms of malaria were categorized as per the World Health Organization guidelines and the clinical and laboratory findings in these cases of complicated malaria were studied.

Statistics: A descriptive statistical analysis was done by using the SPSS software and an Excel worksheet.

Conclusion:This study shows that P.Vivax malaria can indeed run a course with numerous complications. This can be because of increased virulence which has resulted in the changing picture of P.Vivax malaria, considered to cause benign tertian malaria. Further studies should be undertaken to assess the role of malnutrition, concurrent infections and underlying diseases in patient with severe p.vivax malaria.









Powered by Eventact EMS