| Literature DB >> 16780577 |
Cornelia E Rebholz1, Anette J Michel, Daniel A Maselli, Karimov Saipphudin, Kaspar Wyss.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: During the Soviet era, malaria was close to eradication in Tajikistan. Since the early 1990s, the disease has been on the rise and has become endemic in large areas of southern and western Tajikistan. The standard national treatment for Plasmodium vivax is based on primaquine. This entails the risk of severe haemolysis for patients with glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency. Seasonal and geographical distribution patterns as well as G6PD deficiency frequency were analysed with a view to improve understanding of the current malaria situation in Tajikistan.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16780577 PMCID: PMC1533840 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-5-51
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Figure 1Simplified malaria risk model. The model combines the seven mapped datasets to estimate the risk of malaria in Tajikistan.
Figure 2Malaria distribution versus annual temperature and rainfall patterns. The incidence of malaria in 2003 in the districts matches annual temperature patterns, but does not coincide with annual rainfall patterns in Tajikistan.
Figure 3Malaria risk map. The malaria risk map shows where high incidence rates can be expected, should the disease occur there as a result of local environmental suitability and vulnerability of the population to transmission.
Figure 4Prevalence of G6PD deficiency. Average national G6PD deficiency prevalence and varibility among affected districts in southwest Tajikistan.
G6PD deficiency and "risk factors". "Risk factors" for G6PD deficiency such as ethnic origin, socio-economic status, migration, and malaria infections, assessed in the questionnaire.
| DUSHANBE | DANGARA | KUBODYION | TOTAL | |
| Tajik | 2/109 | 1/115 | 1/53 | 4/277 |
| Uzbek | 0/9 | 0/14 | 4/71 | 4/94 |
| Tajiks reporting haemolysis among relatives | 4/109 | 6/115 | 3/53 | 13/27 |
| Uzbeks reporting haemolysis among relatives | 0/9 | 4/13* | 2/71 | 6/93 |
| Class I | 0/25 | 0/34 | 0/25 | 0/84 |
| Class II | 1/14 | 0/21 | 1/24 | 2/59 |
| Class III | 0/8 | 1/26 | 2/26 | 3/60 |
| Class IV | 0/28 | 0/30 | 2/40 | 2/98 |
| Class V | 1/50 | 0/19 | 0/10 | 1/79 |
| Working abroad | 1/15 | 0/2 | 0/9 | 1/26 |
| Never worked abroad | 1/104 | 1/128 | 5/116 | 7/348 |
| Originating from the district | 1/36 | 1/121 | 5/119 | 7/276 |
| Previous malaria infection | 0/9 | 0/20 | 1/47 | 1/76 |
| Never suffered from malaria before | 2/116 | 1/109 | 4/77 | 7/302 |
* significant (X-squared = 4.9704, p-value = 0.02578)