PLASMODIUM-FALCIPARUM HYPERPARASITEMIA - USE OF EXCHANGE-TRANSFUSION IN 7 PATIENTS AND A REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE
- 1 May 1990
- journal article
- review article
- Vol. 75 (277) , 471-481
Abstract
During the last 15 years, at least 35 patients with severe falciparum malaria or babesiosis have recovered following treatment by exchange of up to 10 l of blood. In a patient treated in Manchester, a parasitaemia of 2.10 .times. 106 .mu.l (42 per cent) was virtually eliminated over eight hours by a 3.5 litre exchange blood transfusion. However, the equipment and amounts of compatible blood required for total exchange are rarely available in areas endemic for malaria and the risk of the procedure, including transfusion-related infections, are high. Partial exchange transfusion with one to two litres of blood carried out over two to seven hours, reduced Plasmodium falciparum parasitaemias of 0.33-1.48 7x 106/.mu.l (13-38 per cent) to 0.11-0.81 .times. 106 (4-17 per cent) in six Thai patients who were receiving intravenous quinine. The reduction in parasitaemia ranged from 0.13-0.67 .+-. 106 .mu.l (9-12 per cent) within six hours. During the same period, parasitaemia in 13 patients with cerebral malaria treated with chemotherapy alone showed little reduction from initial levels of 0.20-1.74 .times. 106/.mu.l (11-42 per cent). One of the patients who were treated with exchange trnasfusion died with intractable hypotension before the procedure could be completed and two others developed oliguric renal failure which was controlled by peritoneal dialysis. Partial exchange transfusion is a promising and practical alternative to total exchange where facilities are limited. It deserves further assessment in the rural tropics.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Automated Erythrocyte Exchange in Fulminant Falciparum MalariaAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1984
- Dexamethasone Proves Deleterious in Cerebral MalariaNew England Journal of Medicine, 1982
- Transfusion malaria: treatment with exchange transfusion after delayed diagnosisArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1982