3 research outputs found
Confirmed malaria cases among children under five with fever and history of fever in rural western Tanzania
The World Health Organization recommends that malaria treatment should begin with parasitological diagnosis. This will help to control misuse of anti-malarial drugs in areas with low transmission. The present study was conducted to assess the prevalence of parasitologically confirmed malaria among children under five years of age presenting with fever or history of fever in rural western Tanzania. A finger prick blood sample was obtained from each child, and thin and thick blood smears were prepared, stained with 10% Giemsa and examined under the light microscope. A structured questionnaire was used to collect each patient's demographic information, reasons for coming to the health center; and a physical examination was carried out on all patients. Fever was defined as axillary temperature ā„ 37.5Ā°C. A total of 300 children with fever or a history of fever (1 or 2 weeks) were recruited, in which 54.3% (163/300, 95%CI, 48.7-59.9) were boys. A total of 76 (76/300, 25.3%, 95%CI, 22.8 - 27.8) of the children had fever. Based on a parasitological diagnosis of malaria, only 12% (36/300, 95%CI, 8.3-15.7) of the children had P. falciparum infection. Of the children with P. falciparum infection, 52.7% (19/36, 95%CI, 47.1-58.3) had fever and the remaining had no fever. The geometrical mean of the parasites was 708.62 (95%CI, 477.96-1050.62) parasites/Ī¼l and 25% (9/36, 95%CI, 10.9 -- 39.1) of the children with positive P. falciparum had ā„ 1001 parasites/Ī¼l. On Univariate (OR = 2.13, 95%CI, 1.02-4.43, P = 0.044) and multivariate (OR = 2.15, 95%CI, 1.03-4.49) analysis, only children above one year of age were associated with malaria infections. Only a small proportion of the children under the age of five with fever had malaria, and with a proportion of children having non-malaria fever. Improvement of malaria diagnostic and other causes of febrile illness may provide effective measure in management of febrile illness in malaria endemic areas
Measurement of ovalocyte frequency in peripheral blood smears in defining ovalocytosis in Papua New Guinea
Red cell oval morphology is still the only accepted basis for the clinical or epidemiological diagnosis of ovalocytosis. Therefore it is important to know the errors when detecting and counting morphological ovalocytes. In all previous studies of ovalocytosis there was no assessment of the variation which may have occurred in classification due to smearing and staining techniques or the criteria for the diagnosis of ovalocyte morphology; nor was toter or intraobserver variation assessed. We report how different peripheral blood smear methods influence the diagnosis of ovalocytosis in populations in the Madang and East Sepik Provinces in Papua New Guinea. We also examined within and between observer variation in the quantitative assessment of ovalocytosis at X40 and X100 microscopy powers. A modified method of making a thin malaria blood smear gave the best preservation of red cell morphology and was adopted for the quantitative ovalocytosis studies. A special haematology smear is unnecessary. Ovalocyte frequency estimations were similar when X40 and X100 lenses were used, but X40 was preferable for assessing morphology. Two observers were consistent in their findings and produced very similar results for the high-quality smears from the planned Madang survey, and rather different results for the smears from the unplanned routine Sepik survey. We conclude that measurement error for ovalocytosis assessment can be quite small and unimportant, minimized by careful planning and quality control. Otherwise measurement error is substantial and threatens validity of classification and grading of ovalocytosis