Malaria

Cards (10)

  • Malaria is a notifiable disease.
  • What is malaria caused by?
    4 different Plasmodium species can cause malaria in humans (Plasmodium falciparum is the most common)
  • Pathophys of malaria
    Feeding mosquito sucks up infected blood → parasites reproduce in mosquito’s gut → thousands of sporozoites (malaria spores) → mosquito then bites someone & sporozoites are injected → travel to liver of newly infected person (can lay dormant = hyponozoites) → sporozoites mature into merozoites → enter blood & infect RBCs → merozoites reproduce in RBCs → RBCs rupture → releases more merozoites into blood → haemolytic anaemia
    Can have swinging fever every 48 hours → due to bursting of RBCs → inflammatory response
  • What are the Inx for malaria?

    Obs
    Full Hx & examination
    Bloods (FBC, U&Es, LFTs, CRP, ABG)
    Blood film (gold standard)
    • Microscopy of thick & thin blood films
    • Thick → more sensitive
    • Thin → can determine species
    • Can also see reticulocytosis
  • What are the RFs of malaria?

    Travel to endemic area
    Inadequate or absent chemoprophylaxis
    Insecticide-treated bed net not used in endemic area
    Pregnancy
    Immunocompromised
    Extremes of ages
  • What are the red flags for malaria?
    Fever + Endemic travel
  • What are the signs & symptoms of malaria?

    Non-specific symptoms
    • Fever (up to 41)
    • Fatigue
    • Myalgia (muscle aches & pains)
    • Headache
    • Nausea
    • Vomiting
    • Confusion
    • Pallor
    • Hepatospenomegaly
    • Jaundice
    • Bilirubin released during rupture of RBCs
  • What are the possible complications of malaria?
    Cerebral malaria
    Seizures
    Reduced consciousness
    AKI
    Pulmonary oedema
    Disseminated intravascular coagulopathy (DIC)
    Severe haemolytic anaemia
    Multi-organ failure & death
  • What is the treatment of malaria?

    Antimalarial medication
    Ring infectious diseases to ask for advice

    NOTE:
    • Anti-malarial medications are associated with neurological and psychiatric symptoms
    • Artesunate-type drugs are more efficacious and better tolerated in pregnancy than quinines
  • What is the prophylaxis for malaria?

    Physical barriers
    Chemical barriers
    Avoidance measures
    Coils/electric vaporisers
    Insecticide spray
    Chemoprophylaxis