| Literature DB >> 23914804 |
Stéphanie Schrot-Sanyan1, Sylvie Gaidot-Pagnier, Ahmed Abou-Bacar, Sodiomon Bienvenu Sirima, Ermanno Candolfi.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is a lack of information regarding the epidemiology of malaria among travellers from non-malaria endemic countries to Sahelian areas. The literature provides general statistics about imported malaria in industrialized countries or extensive recommendations about fever management, but none of these recommendations are applicable to developing countries.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23914804 PMCID: PMC3751538 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-12-270
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fever aetiologies in 306 adults from non-malaria endemic countries living or travelling in Burkina Faso
| Undefined fever | |
| With acute digestive symptomatology | 87 (28.4%) |
| Without acute digestive symptomatology | 70 (22.9%) |
| Malaria | 69 (22.6%) |
| Pneumonia | 37 (12.1%) |
| ENT infections | 35 (7.8%) |
| Pyelonephritis | 4 (1.3%) |
| Erysipelas | 4 (1.3%) |
| Total | 306 (100%) |
Figure 1Number of malaria cases in adults from non-Malaria endemic countries living or travelling in Burkina Faso who presented with acute fever during the next year.
Figure 2Malaria prevalence in adults from non-Malaria endemic countries living or travelling in Burkina Faso and presenting with acute fever.
Malaria prevalence according to the length of stay and malaria chemoprophylaxis in 306 febrile adults from non-Malaria endemic countries living or travelling in Burkina Faso
| Journeys under 3 months | With adapted and well-taken chemoprophylaxis | 71 | 1 |
| | | ||
| | Without appropriate chemoprophylaxis | 21 | 11 |
| | | ||
| Journeys over 3 months | With adapted and well-taken chemoprophylaxis | 27 | 0 |
| | | ||
| | Without appropriate chemoprophylaxis | 118 | 57 |
Symptoms associated with fevers in 306 adults travelling in Burkina Faso, regardless of the link to malaria
| Isolated fever | 68 | 54 | 122 |
| Digestive symptoms | 88 | 9 | 97 |
| ENT symptoms | 37 | 5 | 42 |
| Respiratory symptoms | 36 | 1 | 37 |
| Urinary symptoms | 4 | 0 | 4 |
| Cutaneous symptoms | 4 | 0 | 4 |
Statistical value of clinical signs, association of clinical signs and malaria tests (QBC and HRP2-based RDT) for the diagnosis of malaria, according to the results of the thick and thin Giemsa-stained blood films, considered to be the gold standard method (with 95% confidence intervals for sensibility and specificity)
| Isolated fever | 78.3% | 71.3% | 44.3% | 91.9% |
| [68.5 – 88.0] | [65.6 – 77.1] | |||
| Fever present on examination | 31.9% | 85.2% | 38.6% | 81.1% |
| [20.9 – 42.9] | [80.7 – 89.8] | |||
| Isolated fever present on examination | 26.1% | 96.2% | 66.7% | 81.7% |
| [15.7 – 36.5] | [93.8 – 98.6] | |||
| Digestive symptoms | 13.0% | 62.9% | 9.3% | 71.3% |
| [5.1 – 21.0] | [57.2 – 69.4] | |||
| QBC | 98.6% | 99.6% | 98.6% | 99.6% |
| [9.7 – 100] | [98.8 – 100] | |||
| HRP2 | 84.0% | 98.0% | 92.0% | 95.0% |
| (for | [75.4 – 92.7] | [96.7 – 99.9] |
Figure 3Management recommendation for febrile adults from non-malaria endemic countries living or travelling in Sahelian countries.