| Literature DB >> 26537037 |
Roland Wesolowski1, Alina Wozniak1, Celestyna Mila-Kierzenkowska1, Karolina Szewczyk-Golec1.
Abstract
Malaria is a tropical disease caused by protozoans of the Plasmodium genus. Delayed diagnosis and misdiagnosis are strongly associated with higher mortality. In recent years, a greater importance is attributed to Plasmodium knowlesi, a species found mainly in Southeast Asia. Routine parasitological diagnostics are associated with certain limitations and difficulties in unambiguous determination of the parasite species based only on microscopic image. Recently, molecular techniques have been increasingly used for predictive diagnosis. The aim of the study is to draw attention to the risk of travelling to knowlesi malaria endemic areas and to raise awareness among personnel involved in the therapeutic process.Entities:
Keywords: Plasmodium knowlesi; Southeast Asia; human; malaria
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26537037 PMCID: PMC4635839 DOI: 10.3347/kjp.2015.53.5.575
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean J Parasitol ISSN: 0023-4001 Impact factor: 1.341
Fig. 1.Malaria transmission cycle and human-monkey host interaction (based on [19]).
Short characteristics of knowlesi malaria incidents in patients from non-endemic countries
| Year | Patient’s age (year) and sex | Nationality | Chemoprophylaxis | Country of infection | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | 35, man | Swedish | No | Malaysia | [ |
| 2010 | 45, man | French | No data | Thailand | [ |
| 2012 | 33, woman | Scottish | Atovaquone/proguanil (Malarone) for the first 4 days | Malaysia | [ |
| 2012 | 35, man | Japanese | No | Malaysia | [ |
| 2013 | 55, woman | German | No | Thailand | [ |
| 2013 | 54, man | German | No | Thailand | [ |
| 2013 | 73, man | German | No | Myanmar and Thailand | [ |
Fig. 2.Microscopic morphology of Plasmodium knowlesi in May-Grünwald-Giemsa stained thin blood smear. Infected erythrocytes were not enlarged with the presence of much hemozoin and lacked stippling. (A, B) Young trophozoites, (C) late trophozoite, (D) equatorial band form, (E, G) schizonts, (H) merozoites, (I) gametocyte (reproduced from [26]).