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Malaria is a vector-borne disease that is endemic in 91 countries. South East Asia is the second most affected region in the world, with India carrying the highest burden of the disease. Four species of Plasmodium are known to cause malaria in humans. Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium falciparum are the most common species found in India, but Plasmodium malariae have also been reported. Severe complications of malaria have been more commonly seen in P. falciparum infections, and those caused by P. vivax have been considered benign. However, the literature has alarming reports of complicated malaria seen in vivax infections in recent times. This article reports three such cases of P. vivax infection with severe manifestations of malaria such as are found in P. falciparum. This recent evidence indicates that it is important to suspect complicated malaria in P. vivax infection and initiate the appropriate treatment as early as possible to avoid morbidity and mortality.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/2230-8229.163040 | DOI Listing |
Med Trop Sante Int
July 2025
Unité des maladies infectieuses et tropicales et CIC Inserm 1424, Centre hospitalier de Cayenne, Cayenne, Guyane.
Tahiti or the "myth of Paradise", Bora Bora, "the Pearl of the Pacific". Who has never wanted to take a plane and come and land on the heavenly beaches of Polynesia, a French territory at the antipodes of mainland France lost in the middle of the Pacific? However, we do not imagine that 60% of Polynesians live below the metropolitan low-income threshold or that life expectancy is lower than that of the mainland due to the high prevalence of cardiovascular diseases with three quarters overweight population.In addition to non-transmissible metabolic diseases, various pathologies common to temperate countries present specificities in Polynesia, leading to sometimes different management and medical reasoning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Malaria is one of the most infectious diseases, and electrolyte imbalance and mineral disturbances are common clinical manifestations. This study aimed to explore the effect of malaria on biochemical parameters in Sudanese patients with severe falciparum malaria.
Methods: A case-control study was conducted in the clinical laboratory of the Kosti Teaching Hospital between August 2022 and January 2023.
Acute kidney injury is one of the most severe complications of severe malaria, with an overall incidence reaching 60% and a mortality rate of up to 45%. We conducted this study to determine the prevalence of acute kidney injury in malaria, acute kidney injury, associated factors and the impact of acute kidney injury on vital prognosis. This was a multicenter, retrospective, descriptive, and analytical study over a 5-year period from January 1, 2019 to December 31, 2023, in the nephrology and infectious diseases departments and intensive care units of Dakar hospitals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCase Rep Obstet Gynecol
August 2025
Department of Medicine, Surgery and Dentistry "Scuola Medica Salernitana", University of Salerno, Baronissi, Salerno, Italy.
Malaria and amoebic infections are considered risk factors for stillbirth and preterm labor, but their coexistence during pregnancy has not been previously reported. We describe the first case of averted maternal mortality with fetal death in utero at 22 weeks' gestation, complicated by both malaria and hepatic amoebic abscess, in a rural hospital in Burundi. Amoebic liver abscesses are rarely described in pregnancy and, as far as we are aware, never in conjunction with severe malaria: two parasitic infections requiring completely different treatments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Immunol
September 2025
Institute of Human Virology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Innate-like T cells (ILT), including γδ T cells (Vδ2s), Natural Killer T cells (NKTs) and Mucosal-associated Invariant T cells (MAITs), integrate innate and adaptive immunity, playing important roles in homeostatic conditions as well as during infection or inflammation. ILT are present on both sides of the fetal-maternal interface, but our knowledge of their phenotypical and functional features in neonates is limited. Using spectral flow cytometry we characterized cord blood ILT in neonates born to healthy women and women living with HIV.
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