Classification by Plasmodium Strain
The following Plasmodium strains are the most common strains implicated in human malarial infection.
Comparison of Plasmodium Species Implicated in Human Malaria ("Malaria". Center for Disease Control and Prevention. Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Nov. 29 2013. Retrieved Jul 24 2014. )
Strain
|
Appearance of Erythrocyte (RBC)
|
Appearance of Parasite
|
Clinical Significance
|
P. falciparum
|
- Normal appearance with Maurer's clefts: Ring, trophozoite, and schizont forms.
- Distorted appearance: Gametocyte form
|
- Chromatin dots and "appliqué" (accolé): Ring form
- Clump of mass and dark pigment: Trophozoite and schizont forms
- Crescent or sausage shape: Gametocyte form
|
Tertian/subtertian fever (every 48 hours), causes severe malaria in up to 24% of cases, and is often drug resistant.
|
P. vivax
|
- Normal with fine Schüffner dots: Ring form
- Enlarged with fine Schüffner dots: Trophozoite, schizont, and gametocyte forms
|
- Large cytoplasm with pseudopods: Ring form
- Large ameboid cytoplasm with yellow-brown pigment: Trophozite form
- Large mass that fills all RBC with yellow-brown coalescent pigment: Schizont form
- Large mass that fills all RBC with scattered brown pigment: Gametocyte form
|
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
|
- Sturdy cytoplasm and large chromatin: Ring form
- Compact cytoplasm with dark-brown pigment: Trophozoite form
- Large nuclei clustered around mass of dark-brown pigment: Schizont form
- Round to oval form that fills all RBC with scattered brown pigment: Gametocyte form
|
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
|
- Sturdy cytoplasm and large chromatin: Ring form
- Compact cytoplasm with occasional band forms and coarse dark-brown pigment: Trophozoite form
- Large nuclei clustered around mass of coarse, dark-brown pigment and occasional rosettes: Schizont form
- Round to oval form that fills all RBC with scattered brown pigment: Gametocyte form
|
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
|
- Delicate cytoplasm with appliqué (accolé) forms: Ring form
- Compact cytoplasm and large chromatin with band forms and dark-brown pigment: Trophozoite form
- Segmented with large nuclei around mass of coarse brown pigment and occasional rosettes: Schizont form
- Round to oval form that fills all RBC with scattered brown pigment: Gametocyte form
|
Daily fevers, may cause severe malaria in up to 10% of cases. Drug resistance is rare.
|
Adapted from Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) - Malaria
References
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