| Literature DB >> 31113437 |
Rosio I Guerra1, Marianela Ore2, Hugo O Valdivia3, Danett K Bishop3, Mariana Ramos3, Christopher N Mores3,4, Wesley R Campbell5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Plasmodium ovale curtisi and Plasmodium ovale wallikeri are regarded as less virulent forms of malaria with a geographic distribution including Southeast Asia, Central and West Africa, and is increasingly reported as an infection in returning travellers. A species of malaria that may have delayed or relapsing presentations similar to Plasmodium vivax, the clinical presentation of P. ovale spp. has been described to have prepatent periods of 2 weeks or slightly longer with reports of relapse following primary infection out to 8-9 months. This presentation may be obscured further in the setting of anti-malarial exposure, with report of delayed primary infection out to 4 years. Presented is a cluster of 4 imported P. ovale spp. cases in returning Peruvian military personnel assigned to United Nations peace-keeping operations in the Central African Republic. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Malaria; Non-falciparum malaria; Plasmodium ovale; Relapse; Traveler
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31113437 PMCID: PMC6530030 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-019-2809-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fig. 1Giemsa thin smear of the PCR confirmed cases: a MIS2709 sample (patient 1), ×100 schizont with an estimated 10 merozoites with fimbriation, normal to slightly enlarged red blood cell, consistent with P. ovale spp. b MIS2712 sample (patient 2), ×100 trophozoite with large chromatin dot
Plasmodium ovale spp. cases
| Patient | Service | Age | Episodes | Primary treatment regimen | Delay in presentation (months) | Presenting complaint | Lab abnormalities | Parasitemia (parasites/µl) | Diagnosis | Treatment regimen |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1a | Navy | 44 | 1 | Artemether 80 mg lumefantrine 480 mg | < 1 | BP; (F, HA, GF)a | None | 778 | PCR microscopy | Chloroquine 250 mg primaquine 30 mg (14 days) |
| 2b | Army | 38 | 1 | Artemether 80 mg lumefantrine 480 mg | 11 | F, HA, M, A | Th, Tr, IHB | 27,339 | PCR microscopy | Chloroquine 250 mg primaquine 30 mg (7 days) |
| 3 | Army | 44 | 1 | Artemether 80 mg lumefantrine 480 mg | 11 | F, HA, M | Th, Tr, IHB | 433 | Microscopy | Chloroquine 250 mg primaquine 30 mg (7 days) |
| 4 | Army | 50 | 2 | Artemether 80 mg lumefantrine 480 mg | 11 | F, HA, GF, T | Tr | 481 | Microscopy | Chloroquine 250 mg primaquine 30 mg (7 days) |
Delayed presentation time in months from date of return to Peru to seeking care
CAR Central Africa Republic, PCR polymerase chain reaction, BP back pain, F fever, HA headache, M myalgia, A arthralgia, GF general fatigue, T thoracic pain, Th thrombocytopenia, Tr transaminitis, IHB indirect hyperbilirubinemia
aPatient with P. ovale. curtisi, originally presented with BP 5 days after returning from CAR, symptoms then continued intermittently until April 2017 when diagnosis was made after 2 weeks HA, at 3½ months was admitted with F, BP, M
bPatient with P. ovale. wallikeri (MIS2712)
Fig. 2The figure shows the nested species-specific PCR for P. ovale. Lanes 1–4 correspond to the P. vivax reaction, lanes 5–8 correspond to the P. falciparum reaction and lanes 9–12 correspond to the P. ovale specific reaction. P. ovale was detected on MIS2595, whereas MIS2712 was only positive for Plasmodium spp. (≈ 1200 bp). We later determined via sequencing that MIS2712 was P. ovale wallikeri which is not detected by the PCR method we employed here
Fig. 3Maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree of the small subunit ribosomal RNA sequence. The tree shows that MIS2595 is phylogenetically related to P. ovale curtisi strains whereas MIS2712 is related to P. ovale wallikeri. The tree was rooted with the P. falciparum 3D7 sequence which show 100% bootstrap support for the P. ovale curtisi and P. ovale wallikeri nodes