| Literature DB >> 20064229 |
Janet Cox-Singh1, Jessie Hiu, Sebastian B Lucas, Paul C Divis, Mohammad Zulkarnaen, Patricia Chandran, Kum T Wong, Patricia Adem, Sherif R Zaki, Balbir Singh, Sanjeev Krishna.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Zoonotic malaria caused by Plasmodium knowlesi is an important, but newly recognized, human pathogen. For the first time, post-mortem findings from a fatal case of knowlesi malaria are reported here. CASEEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20064229 PMCID: PMC2818646 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-9-10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Admission laboratory findings
| Parameter | Values normal [range] | Values observed |
|---|---|---|
| Haemoglobin (g/dL) | [13·5-17·5] | 12.7 |
| Platelets (/uL) | [150,000-450,000] | 42,800 |
| Haematocrit (%) | [42-54] | 36.7 |
| Total white blood cells (/uL) | [4,500-11,000] | 10.1 |
| Neutrophils (%) | 15.1 | |
| Lymphocytes (%) | 36.7 | |
| Monocytes (%) | 12.1 | |
| Eosinophils (%) | 33.9 | |
| Basophils (%) | 2.17 | |
| Red blood cells (× 106/uL) | [4-5] | 4.86 |
| Mean Cell Volume (fL) | [80-100] | 75.5 |
| Mean Cell Haemoglobin (pg) | [29-31] | 26.1 |
| Mean Corpuscular Haemoglobin concentration | [32-36] | 34.6 |
| Mean Platelet volume (fL) | [7.5-11.5] | 11.5 |
| Serum sodium (mmol/L) | [135-150] | 126 |
| Serum potassium (mmol/L) | [3.3-5.1] | 6.9 |
| Serum urea (mmol/L) | [1.0-8.3] | 34.1 |
| Serum aspartate amino transferase (U/L) | [<38] | 131 |
| Serum creatine kinase (U/L) | [<170] | 156 |
| Serum lactate dehydrogenase (U/L) | [240-480] | 2777 |
Figure 1Thin blood film showing mostly late trophozoites of . Note that the blood film was prepared 24 hours post mortem and shows red cell ghosts, particularly among parasite infected red blood cells.
Figure 2Gross appearance of the brain. The outer surface appears dusky with petechial haemorrhages seen on the outer surface of the cerebellum (2a). Cut section of the cerebellum with multiple petechial haemorrhages seen within the cerebellar grey matter (2b).
Figure 3Plasmodium-specific anti-aldolase immunohistochemistry stained sections from the brain. Parasites appear red.
Figure 4Haematoxylin and eosin stained sections of the cerebellum (a, b, c, e, f) and cerebrum (d). Low power view showing haemorrhages in the grey and white matter × 20 (4a). Haemorrhage in the cerebellar molecular layer × 40 (4b). 4c × 400 and 4d both × 200 show capillaries with sequestered parasitized red blood cells. There was no perivascular inflammation nor intravascular thrombosis. Venule with parasitized red blood cells × 200 (4e) and haemorrhage showing mixture of parasitized and non-parasitized red blood cells × 400 (4f).
Figure 5Haematoxylin and eosin stained extra cerebral tissues. (5a) spleen × 400 showing red pulp macrophages containing much haemozoin pigment as well as phagocytozed red blood cells. (5b) liver × 400 showing macrovesicular steatosis of hepatocytes without parenchymal inflammation. The sinusoids have abundant parasitized red blood cells as well as Kupffer cells containing haemozoin. (5c) kidney × 200 showing acute tubular necrosis and intratubular casts. Intravascular parasitized red blood cells also visible. The myofibres of the left ventricle of the heart are normal (5d × 200). Small veins and capillaries contain abundant parasitized red blood cells and endothelial cells are prominent.