Hiperparasitemia por Plasmodium falciparum como criterio diagnóstico de malaria grave. Fotografía médica.
Contenido principal del artículo
Resumen
Plasmodium falciparum es el agente etiológico más frecuentemente asociado a malaria grave, dentro de cuyos criterios diagnósticos destacan: hiperparasitemia, distress respiratorio, malaria cerebral, hipoglicemia, insuficiencia renal, entre otros [1]. La hiperparasitemia es uno de los criterios de laboratorio para severidad; una parasitemia >10%, incluso en ausencia de hallazgos clínicos de severidad, indica malaria grave [2,3].
Medical Photograph: hyperparasitemia by Plasmodium falciparum as a diagnostic criterion of severe malaria
A 37 year-old male from Santa Lucía, Miranda state, complained of unquantified daily fevers for the past week, preceded by chills and followed by profuse sweating; also, he complained of headaches, as well as pain in his joints and lower back. The patient denied any previous episodes of malaria. Physical examination during hospitalization showed pallor, dry cough and hepatosplenomegaly. A peripheral blood sample was taken for thick and thin smears with an inverted Giemsa’s stain and later observed under optical microscopy (1,000X magnification, Nikon Eclipse E200®). Note the large amount of ring-form trophozoites in the thick smear, while the thin smear shows a single gametocyte, many appliqué forms and red blood cells with polyparasitism. There are approximately 20% of infected red blood cells, with an estimated parasitemia of 98,850 parasites/μL.
Plasmodium falciparum is the species most frequently associated to severe malaria, which includes the following as its most distinguished diagnostic criteria: hyperparasitemia, respiratory distress, cerebral malaria, hypoglycemia, kidney failure, among others [1]. Hyperparasitemia is one of the laboratory criteria for determining
Descargas
Detalles del artículo
Citas
Cerrada C, Díaz MA, Ramirez R, Noya O. Hiperparasitemia por Plasmodium falciparum como criterio diagnóstico de malaria grave. Fotografía médica. Acta Cient Estud. 2017;12(2):35-37