Clinical falciparum malaria: Its severity, types, splenomegaly, association with malnutrition and criteria for diagnosis
Abstract
A clinical study of 78 consecutive cases - almost all by P. falciparum - was carried out.
The population is semi-immune.
1. Most of the patients appeared to have contracted the disease when visiting the
rural areas. Relapse malaria appears to be very uncommon.
2. The disease is very common in infants and children.
3. The spleen was palpable in about a third of all the cases, but the number of children
who showed a splenomegaly was significantly greater than in the adults. The
possibility that malaria is a cause of sequestration of the spleen is made.
4. A confident diagnosis of acute malaria is seldom made in the absence of positive
blood smears.
5. Not uncommonly the main presenting symptoms were those of cough, diarrhoea
or severe headache.
6. The main clinical types are described, the most common found being the anaemic
type. There was one case which corresponded to the psychiatric type. Other types encountered included those of cerebral, renal, hepatic, gastrointestinal and algid.
7. Severe malaria may not uncommonly be seen in the malnourished infant or child.
8. A positive blood culture occurred in some of the cases with acute malaria but the
importance of this finding was difficult to assess.
9. The criteria for considering a diagnosis of acute malaria in the absence of positive
blood smears are made.
10. Often when chloroquine was given to a patient the fever dropped steeply.
Additional Citation Information
Gelfand, M. (1983). Clinical falciparum malaria: Its severity, types, splenomegaly, association with malnutrition and criteria for diagnosis. Central African Journal of Medicine, 29 (12), 233-238.Publisher
University of Zimbabwe, College of Health Sciences