| Literature DB >> 28662650 |
Emilia Velasco1, Diana Gomez-Barroso2,3, Carmen Varela1,4, Oliva Diaz1, Rosa Cano1,4.
Abstract
Spain declared the elimination of malaria in 1964. In non-endemic areas, the overwhelming majority of malaria cases are acquired abroad, and locally acquired infections are rare events. In Spain, malaria is a statutorily notifiable disease. During these fifty years more than ten thousand malaria cases have been reported, and about 0.8% of them did not have a history of recent travel. In this report, it was carried out a review of the ways in which malaria can be transmitted in non-endemic areas and a short description of the Spanish cases, aggregated by their transmission mechanisms. Four cases contracted malaria by mosquito bites; there were two autochthonous cases and two of "airport malaria". The other 28 cases were: congenital malaria cases, transfusion-transmitted malaria, post-transplant cases, nosocomial transmission and cases in intravenous drug users. In addition, in 1971 there was an outbreak of 54 cases due to exposure to blood or blood products. So, while malaria usually is an imported disease in non-endemic areas, it should not be excluded in the differential diagnosis of persons who have fever of unknown origin, regardless of their travel history.Entities:
Keywords: Malaria; Non-endemic areas; Transmission mechanisms
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28662650 PMCID: PMC5492460 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-017-1915-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Reported cases of non-imported malaria in Spain
| Event classification | Year of diagnosis |
| Cases | Relevant epidemiological data | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Introduced malaria | 2010 |
| 1 | The patient lived in an area with | [ |
| 2014 |
| 1 | The strains of both the patient and of a case with malaria that had travelled to Pakistan matched by molecular typing. No anopheline vector was detected in the area | [ | |
| Airport malaria | 1984 |
| 1 | The patient visited a family member who lived less than 6 km from Madrid airport | [ |
| 2001 |
| 1 | The patient lived close to two international airports (4 and 18 km distance, respectively) | [ | |
| Congenital malaria | 1999 |
| 1 | The mother was an expatriate and has been living in Equatorial Guinea until the 8 month of pregnancy | [ |
| 2007 |
| 1 | The mother, asymptomatic, have arrived to Spain a year before from Senegal | ||
| 2009 |
| 1 | The mother originally came from Equatorial Guinea | ||
| 2011 |
| 1 | The mother was an expatriate who had come from Equatorial Guinea when she was in the 6th month of pregnancy | ||
| 2014 |
| 1 | The mother have travelled to Equatorial Guinea to visit her relatives | [ | |
| Induced malaria | |||||
| Transfusional | 1971 |
| 54 | 43 cases received full blood transfusions +11 cases received plasmapheresis. Origen: a blood bank whose donors have different African origin: Algeria, Morocco and Equatorial Guinea | [ |
| 1987 |
| 1 | The donor have travelled to Democratic Republic of Congo | [ | |
| 1997 |
| 1 | The possible donor was a Central African expatriate who have travelled several times to his country | [ | |
| 2002 |
| 1 | No known donor | [ | |
| Post-transplant | 2005 |
| 3 | The donor had lived in Colombia until the year before. One symptomatic recipient and two with positive smears | [ |
| 2005 |
| 2 | Bolivian donor. Both recipients had symptoms | ||
| 2013 |
| 3 | The donor had arrived from Mali a year before. Two symptomatic recipients and one with a positive antigen test | [ | |
| 2014 |
| 1 | The donor had travelled to Equatorial Guinea | [ | |
| Parenteral | 1984 |
| 5 | Needles shared with people who had travelled to Equatorial Guinea | [ |
| 1986 |
| 2 | Needles shared with people who had travelled to Equatorial Guinea | [ | |
| Other nosocomial | 1978 |
| 1 | A nurse was infected by a malarial patient | [ |
| 1998 |
| 1 | The case shared room with and nursing care patient with malaria | [ | |
| 2010 |
| 1 | The case shared room and nursing care with a patient with malaria | [ | |
| 2011 |
| 1 | The case shared room with a patient with malaria. Molecular typing in both patients matched | [ | |
Years 1964–2014