4. Geographical Distribution
• P. vivax and P. falciparum more common
P. ovale rarest of the 4 species
• > 200 million people worldwide
> 1 million deaths per year
Most common lethal infectious disease
5. Geographical Distribution
• Tropical & subtropical areas
esp. Asia, Africa, Central and South America
Certain regions in SE Asia, S. America, E.
Africa Chloroquine Resistant strains of P.
falciparum
7. HABITAT
• Female Anopheles sexual cycle
• Liver & RBCs of man asexual cycle
RBC Age Variable:
P. vivax youngest erythrocytes
P. malariae oldest erythrocytes
P. falciparum RBCs of every age
10. MORPHOLOGY
•
Peripheral blood stained with Leishman’s stain
1.
Small Trophozoites (Ring forms):
Infected RBC at first ring form
a)
b)
c)
Dot/rod shaped nucleus (red)
Peripheral rim of cytoplasm (blue)
Central clear vacuole like area (not stained)
Different species have different rings
11. MORPHOLOGY
2.
Large Trophozoite:
•
•
Ring form Large trophozoite
Fine grains of pigment Hematin
3.
Schizont:
Large trophozoite schizont N/C fragments merozoites
4.
Gametocytes:
•
•
•
Male and female distinguishable
Fully grown rounded occupies most of RBC
P. falciparum sausage shaped crescent in RBC
19. PATHOGENESIS
• Usual Incubation periods:
Vivax : 14 days
Malariae: 28 days
Falciparum: 11 days
• Transmission:
Mosquito bite
I/V drug abuse
Blood transfusion
Transplacental (congenital)
FEVER, ANEMIA, SPLENOMEGALY
20. PATHOGENESIS
• Malarial Relapses:
• P. vivax 2 years
• Para-erythrocytic stage liver parenchyma
dormant but viable
• Resistance lowered released and activated
complete erythrocytic cycle
• Not in P. falciparum as no para-erythrocytic stage
• Transmission other than mosquito bites no relapses
23. Signs and Symptoms
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Abrupt fever, chills and rigors
Headache
Initially may be continuous then periodic
Upto 41ºC or 106 ºF
Nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, anorexia, distaste of mouth
Drenching sweats afterwards
Well between febrile episodes
Splenomegaly
1/3 hepatomegaly
Anemia
Falciparum fatal bcz of brain and kidney damage
25. Laboratory Diagnosis
1.
Blood Exam:
a. Microscopic Exam:
•
•
•
•
•
Take blood during pyrexia
Not after even single dose of anti-malarials
Thick and thin smears made, dried and stained
Thick smear presence of organisms
Thin smear identification of species
26. Laboratory Diagnosis
• Thin Smear:
•
•
•
•
•
•
Single drop of blood
Spread to allow single cell layer
Leishman’s stain
Oil immersion lens
Ring shaped trophozoites in RBCs
P. falciparum gametocyte banana, sausage or crescent
shaped
• Other species gametocytes are spherical
• > 5 % RBCs infected Dx of P. falciparum
27. Laboratory Diagnosis
• Thick Smear:
•
•
•
•
•
3-5 drops on slide allowed to dry
Several cell layers thick
Field’s stain or Giemsa stain
Oil immersion lens
Stain removes Hb from RBCs
30. Laboratory Diagnosis
2. Biopsy:
•
BM and liver biopsies in difficult cases
3. Therapeutic Test:
•
Anti-malarials given if fever subsides Dx made
4. Serological Tests:
•
•
•
•
Fluorescent antibody testing
Complement fixation test
Flocculation test
Hemagglutination test
31. Treatment
Falciparum easily treated before
complications as no relapses and no paraerythrocytic stage
Chloroquine is treatment of choice for
sensitive strains of plasmodia (merozoites)
Primaquine (Hypnozoites)
Mefloquine or quinine and doxycycline
(chloroquine resistant strains of falciparum)
Atovaquone and proguanil (Malarone) (CR
falciparum)