| Literature DB >> 29618382 |
Boniphace Sylvester1, Dinah B Gasarasi2, Said Aboud3, Donath Tarimo2, Siriel Massawe4, Rose Mpembeni5, Gote Swedberg6.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Existing information has shown that infants who are prenatally exposed to P. falciparum are susceptible to subsequent malaria infections. However, the effect of prenatal exposure to P. falciparum on parasite density during clinical malaria episodes has not been fully elucidated. This study is a component of a prospective cohort study for which initial results have been published. This component was designed to determine the effect of prenatal exposure to P. falciparum on parasite density during clinical malaria episodes in the first 24 months of life. A total of 215 infants were involved and monitored for clinical malaria episodes defined by fever (≥ 37 °C) and parasitaemia. The geometric mean parasite counts between exposed and unexposed infants were compared using independent samples t test. The effect of in utero exposure to P. falciparum on parasite density was assessed using binary logistic regression.Entities:
Keywords: Hyperparasitaemia; In utero; Infants; Malaria; P. falciparum; Parasite density
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29618382 PMCID: PMC5885461 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-018-3339-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Fig. 1Mean parasite counts during clinical malaria episodes in exposed sensitized, exposed non sensitized and unexposed infants. The figure with standard error bars shows the geometric mean counts/µl of blood in the infants born to mothers without placental malaria (no exposure group), infants born to mother with placental malaria (pm+) and were seropositive for IgM against Pfmsp1–19 and Pfmsp2 in their cord blood sera (exposed sensitized group) and infants born to mothers with placental malaria (pm+) and were seronegative for IgM against Pfmsp1–19 and Pfmsp2 in their cord blood sera (exposed non-sensitized)
Effect of prenatal exposure to P. falciparum, gravidity, season of birth, birth weights and IPTp-SP on hyperparasitaemia: binary logistic regression (BLR)
| Factors | OR (CI 95%) | P value |
|---|---|---|
| Non exposure to | 1 (–) | – |
| Exposure to | 7.04 (2.31–21.74) | < 0.01 |
| Gravidity | ||
| Primigravida | 1 (–) | – |
| Multigravida | 1.97 (0.717–5.125) | 0.195 |
| Season of birth | ||
| Dry season | 1 (–) | – |
| Wet season | 0.994 (0.280–1.803) | 0.992 |
| Gender | ||
| Males | 1 (–) | – |
| Female | 1.803 (0.673–4.831) | 0.241 |
| Birth weight | ||
| (≥ 2.5 kg) | 1 (–) | – |
| (≤ 2.5 kg) | 2.267 (0.637–8.072) | 0.207 |
| IPTp-sp | ||
| Use | 1 (–) | – |
| Non use | 0.711 (0.043–11.865) | 0.812 |
The weight ≤ 2.5 kg was considered underweight while ≥ 2.5 was considered normal weight
OR odds ratio, CI confidence interval, IPTp-SP intermittent preventive treatment with sulfadoxine pyrimethamine. BLR binary logistic regression