Malaria classification: Difference between revisions
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Attack lasts 6-10 hours consisting of 3 stages: | Attack lasts 6-10 hours consisting of 3 stages: | ||
*Cold stage: Shivering | |||
*Hot stage: Fever, vomiting, and seizure | |||
*Sweating stage: Sweating and fatigue | |||
Non-specific symptoms**Fever and chills | Non-specific symptoms**Fever and chills | ||
*Sweating | |||
*Headache | |||
*Nausea and vomiting | |||
*Body aches | |||
*General malaise | |||
Physical findings**Fever | Physical findings**Fever | ||
*Tachypnea | |||
*Perspiration | |||
*Weakness | |||
*Hepatosplenomegaly | |||
*Jaundice | |||
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Malaria complicated by organ damage. It is considered a medical emergency that requires prompt hospitalization. | Malaria complicated by organ damage. It is considered a medical emergency that requires prompt hospitalization. | ||
*Cerebral malaria: Altered mental status, seizures, coma, neurologic deficit | |||
*Hemolytic anemia: Hemoglobinuria, jaundice, splenomegaly | |||
*Coagulopathy | |||
*Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS): Dyspnea, cough, hypoxia | |||
*Cardiovascular collapse | |||
*Acute kidney injury | |||
*Metabolic acidosis | |||
*Hypoglycemia | |||
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Revision as of 22:19, 24 July 2014
Malaria Microchapters |
Diagnosis |
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Treatment |
Case studies |
Malaria classification On the Web |
American Roentgen Ray Society Images of Malaria classification |
Risk calculators and risk factors for Malaria classification |
Classification by Plasmodium Strain
The following Plasmodium strains are the most common strains implicated in human malarial infection.
Strain | Appearance of Erythrocyte (RBC) | Appearance of Parasite | Clinical Significance |
---|---|---|---|
P. falciparum |
|
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Tertian/subtertian fever (every 48 hours), causes severe malaria in up to 24% of cases, and is often drug resistant. |
P. vivax |
|
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Tertian fever (every 48 hours), causes severe malaria in up to 22% of cases, and is often drug resistant. Relapse is common due to dormant liver phase. |
P. ovale | Normal with fine Schüffner dots |
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Tertian fever (every 48 hours), rarely causes severe malaria or drug resistance. Relapse is common due to dormant liver phase. |
P. malariae | Normal with Ziemann's stippling |
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Quartan fever (every 72 hrs), rarely causes severe malaria or drug resistance. Although dormant liver phase is uncommon, infection persistence is commonly seen. |
P. knowlesi | Normal with Sinton and Mulligan stippling |
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Daily fevers, may cause severe malaria in up to 10% of cases. Drug resistance is rare. |
Classification by Severity of Infection
The following table classifies malaria infection according to severity of infection.
Severity | Clinical Significance |
---|---|
Uncomplicated |
Attack lasts 6-10 hours consisting of 3 stages:
|
Severe |
Malaria complicated by organ damage. It is considered a medical emergency that requires prompt hospitalization.
|