| Literature DB >> 23878701 |
Laura Nyawira Wangai1, Muriira Geoffrey Karau, Paul Nthakanio Njiruh, Omar Sabah, Francis Thuo Kimani, Gabriel Magoma, Njagi Kiambo.
Abstract
Detection of Plasmodium species by microscopy has been the gold standard for diagnosis of malaria for more than a century. Despite the fact that there is a significant decline in the number of positive cases reported from microscopy, antimalarial drugs prescriptions are on continuous increase as patients present with symptoms of malaria. This makes it difficult to establish accuracy, sensitivity and specificity of light microscopy in diagnosis of malaria in epidemic areas. This study was designed to compare microscopy with polymerase chain reaction as diagnostic methods for malaria in three epidemic areas in Kenya. A total of 356 patients presenting with malaria symptoms were diagnosed by microscopy and dried blood filter paper spots were collected from patient in Kisii, West Pokot and Narok districts. Plasmodium falciparum DNA was extracted from the dried blood filter samples. Primers specific for the Plasmodium Species were designed and used in a two step amplification of the Pfmdr gene. The PCR products were analyzed in ethidium bromide stained 1.5% agarose gel. It was found that 72 out of 350 specimens diagnosed as negative were positive for P. falciparum by nested PCR, while 6 which were microscopy positive were confirmed so by nested PCR. This study demonstrates that there is a high level of misdiagnosis which may either lead to denial for deserved treatment or undeserved treatment. Nested PCR detection of malaria parasites is a very useful complement to microscopy although it is expensive and takes long time. Additionally, smear negative patients suspected to have malaria should be subjected to PCR diagnosis to improve rational drug use. The economic burden of misdiagnosis and mistreatment of malaria outweighs that of PCR diagnosis, hence this diagnostic mode could be tenable in the long run even in rural areas.Entities:
Keywords: Plasmodium falciparum; diagnosis; epidemics; microscopy; polymerase chain reaction
Year: 2011 PMID: 23878701 PMCID: PMC3497842 DOI: 10.4314/ajid.v5i1.66504
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Afr J Infect Dis ISSN: 2006-0165
Shows the accuracy, sensitivity and specificity of PCR against microscopy for the samples collected from Kisii, Narok and west Pokot. These values were computed from www.graphpad.com/instat3/instat.htm taking microscopy as the gold standard
| STUDY | SENSITIVITY | SPECIFICITY | ACCURACY OF THE |
| KISII | 100 | 79 | 39.7 |
| NAROK | *** | 92.9 | *** |
| WEST POKOT | 100 | 68.9 | 34 |
Legend: ***, no values for sensitivity and accuracy for the samples from Narok.
Figure 1Representative gel showing nested PCR products on 1.5% agarose gel electrophoresis of P. falciparum negative blood filters determined by microscopy. MM is the molecular weight marker, Lane 1, represents the negative control, Lane 2, the positive control and lanes 3–17 are the P. falciparum negative samples by microscopy from the epidemic areas.