1 research outputs found
HEMATOLOGIC AND CLINICAL INDICES OF MALARIA IN A SEMI-IMMUNE POPULATION OF WESTERN THAILAND
This study examines hematologic profiles of persons with acute Plasmodium falciparum or P. vivax
infection in Maesod on Thailand’s western border with Myanmar compared with febrile, non-parasitemic persons also
reporting to malaria clinics. Nine hundred seventy-nine subjects were malaria-negative, 414 were infected with P.
falciparum, and 646 were infected with P. vivax. Persons with patent parasitemia tended to have significantly lower white
blood cell, red blood cell, platelet, and hemoglobin levels than those who were malaria-negative. For the first time, a
parallel trend in thrombocytopenia with parasitemia was found to be associated with both P. falciparum, and P. vivax
infection. Using logistic regression, persons with platelet counts < 150,000/µL were 12−15 times more likely to have
malaria than persons with platelet counts ≥ 150,000/µL. This study supplements previous literature on the hematologic
effects of malaria and helps define those alterations for a semi-immune population. Thrombocytopenia is identified as
a key indicator of malaria in these febrile patients