Malaria
Malaria
PREPARED BY :
1.MERYEM
MOHAMMED
2.TILAHUN MOGES
3. EMAN
ABDURAHMAN
4.EDLAWIT ADUGNA
08/14/2024
outline
INTRODUCTION
EPIDEMIOLOGY
ETHIOLOGY
PATHOPHISOLOGY
CLASSIFICATION
CLINICAL PRESENTATION/LAB-
MANAGEMANTS
REFERENCE
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Introduction
Malaria is a parasitic infectious disease caused by
protozoan parasites of the genus Plasmodium and is
transmitted by mosquitoes.
It is characterized by recurrent symptoms of chills, fever
and generalized body pain.
The five Plasmodium species of human malaria are: P.
falciparum, P. vivax, P. ovale, P. malariae and P. knowlesi.
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EPIDEMIOLOGY
About 52 million people (68%) live in malaria risk areas in
Ethiopia,
Primarily at altitudes below 2,000 meters
Historically, there have been an estimated 10 million
clinical malaria cases annually.
Since 2006, however, cases have reduced substantially
60%-70% of malaria cases have been due to P. falciparum,
with the remainder caused by P. vivax.
Anopheles arabiensis is the main malaria vector
Malarial death in areas of high malaria transmission
occur primarily in children <5yrs of age
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Etiology and life cycle of parasites
There are three modes of malaria transmission:
the bite of an infected female anopheline mosquito
(the main method of transmission);
accidental transmission via blood transfusion or
needle stick injury; and
Congenital transmission from mother to child during
pregnancy or parturition.
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Figure 2: Life cycle of malaria
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parasite
Tissue schizonts
Schizont Trophozoite
Merozoites
Sporozoites Gametocytes
Oocyst
Zygotes
Figure 1: Life cycle of malaria parasite (From Krogstad DJ: Blood and tissue protozoa. In
Schaechter M, Medoff G, Eisenstein BI [eds]: Mechanisms of Microbial Diseases, 2nd ed.
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Baltimore, Williams & Wilkins, 1993, p 600.)
Life cycle of the malaria parasite.
The upper and lower halves of the diagram indicate
the human and anopheline mosquito parts of the
cycle, respectively.
Sporozoites from the salivary gland of a female
Anopheles mosquito are injected under the skin (1).
They then travel through the blood stream to the liver (2)
and mature within hepatocytes to become tissue
schizonts (4).
Up to 30,000 parasites are then released into the blood
stream as merozoites (5) and produce symptomatic
infection as they invade and destroy red blood cells.
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Cont...
They are the parasites that cause relapsing
malaria (in P.vivax or P.ovale infection).
Once within the blood stream,
merozoites (5) invade red blood cells (6) and
mature to the ring (7, 8),
trophozoite (9), and schizont (10) asexual stages.
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4
Cont...
Schizonts lyse their host red blood cells as they mature
and release the next generation of merozoites (11), which
invade previously uninfected red blood cells.
Within the RBC, some parasites differentiate to sexual forms
(male and female gametocytes) (12).
When taken up by a female Anopheles mosquito, the
gametocytes mature to male and female gametes, which
produce zygotes (14).
The zygote invades the gut of the mosquito (15) and
develops into an oocyst (16).
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Cont...
Mature oocysts produce sporozoites, which migrate
to the salivary gland of the mosquito (1) and repeat the
cycle.
The horizontal line between 12 and 13 indicates that
absence of the mosquito vector prevents natural
transmission by means of this cycle.
Infection by the injection of contaminated blood
bypasses this constraint and permits transmission
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PATHOPHISOLOGY
Plasmodium species have two reproductive cycle
1. Asexual phase
In human host
Is a two-step process
Clinical
Laboratory
Identify species of malaria
CBC.
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Clinical Malaria
Non-specific symptoms
Lack of a sense of well-being,
Headache,
Fatigue, abdominal discomfort, and muscle aches
Physical findings
Fever usually above 38°C
Mild anemia.
Common among young children living in areas with stable
transmission (or during the high-transmission period of
seasonal malaria), children with palmar pallor or a
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haemoglobin concentration of < 8 g/dL.
Cont...
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Supportive treatment for uncomplicated malaria
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Pharmacologic Treatment
Parasite First line Alternative
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Artemisinin-based Combination
Therapy
artemether-lumefantrine (AL)
artesunate-amodiaquine (AS+AQ)
artesunate-mefloquine (ASMQ)
dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine (DHAP)
artesunate + sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (AS+SP)
artesunate-pyronaridine (ASPY) (2022)
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Treatment of Uncomplicated
Malaria
Uncomplicated malaria is defined as
symptomatic malaria without signs of
severity or evidence
(clinical or laboratory) of vital organ
dysfunction.
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Treatment of Uncomplicated
Malaria
1. P. falciparum positive by multi–species RDT:
First-line:
Artemether plus lumefantrine (20/120 mg),
6-dose regimen over a 3-day period
Alternatives:
Quinine HCl 600mg PO TID for 7 days
Artesunate plus amodiaquine,
Artesunate plus mefloquine,
Artesunate plus sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine,
Dihydroartemisinin plus piperaquine.
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Treatment of Uncomplicated
Malaria
Tablet containing artemether-lumefantrine (20/120mg) in a fixed dose.
phosphate (salt))
Dose:
10 mg base/kg po immediately (Day 1),
10 mg base/kg po at 24 hours (Day 2), and
5mg base/kg po at 48 hours (Day 3) for a total dose of 25mg
chloroquine base/kg over three days
PLUS premaquine 0.25mg/kg for 14 days
0.25 – 0.5mg/kg/day primaquine once a day for 14 days to
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Treatment of Sever Malaria
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Treatment of severe and complicated P. falciparum
malaria
Objectives
Administer medicines parenterally to ensure adequate
blood-serum concentrations of the medicine and rapid
clearance of parasitaemia.
Provide urgent treatment for life threatening problems.
e.g. convulsions, hypooglycaemia, dehydration, renal
impairment .
Prevent death from malaria
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Treatment of Severe Malaria
Signs Manifestations
Major
Unarousable coma/cerebral Failure to localize or respond appropriately to noxious stimuli;
malaria coma persisting for >30 min after generalized convulsion
Acidemia/acidosis Arterial pH of <7.25 or plasma bicarbonate level of <15 mmol/L;
venous lactate level of >5 mmol/L; manifests as labored deep
breathing, often termed “respiratory distress”
Severe normochromic, Hematocrit of <15% or hemoglobin level of <5 g/dL with
normocytic anemia parasitemia <10,000/μL
Renal failure Scr >3 mg/dL; urine output (24 h) of < 400 mL in adults or <12
mL/kg in children; no improvement with rehydration
Pulmonary edema/adult Noncardiogenic pulmonary edema, often aggravated by
respiratory distress syndrome overhydration
Hypoglycemia Plasma glucose level of <40 mg/dL
Hypotension/shock Systolic blood pressure of <50 mmHg in children 1–5 years or <80
mmHg in adults; core/skin temperature difference of >10°C;
capillary refill >2s
Bleeding/DIC Significant bleeding and hemorrhage from the gums, nose, and
gastrointestinal tract and/or evidence of DIC
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Treatment of Severe Malaria
Signs Manifestations
Hypotension/shock Systolic blood pressure of <50 mmHg in children 1–5 years or <80 mmHg
in adults; core/skin temperature difference of >10°C; capillary refill >2 s
Bleeding/DIC Significant bleeding and hemorrhage from the gums, nose, and
gastrointestinal tract and/or evidence of DIC
Convulsions More than two generalized seizures in 24 h
Others
Hemoglobinuria Macroscopic black, brown, or red urine; not associated with effects of
oxidant drugs and red blood cell enzyme defects (such as G6PDdeficiency)
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Treatment of Severe Malaria
First-line treatment
IV or IM artesunate (preferred)
IM artemether (alternate)
IV quinine infusion (if artesunate is not available)
IM quinine (if artesunate is not available)
Give parentral Antimalarials in the treatment of
severe malaria for a minimum of 24 hours, once
started (irrespective of the patient’s ability to
tolerate oral medication earlier)
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Treatment of Severe Malaria
Artesunate dosing
2.4 mg/kg BW IV or IM given on admission (time = 0),
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Treatment of Severe Malaria
For IV:
Add 5 ml of 5% glucose (D5W) or NS then infuse
slowly intravenously (3-4 ml per minute IV)
For IM
Add 2 ml of 5% glucose (D5W) or NS to the
reconstituted 7 ml vial to make 3 ml of artesunate
(20 mg/ml) for IM injection
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Dose Regime of Artesunate IV, IM
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The parenteral treatment should be changed to P.O.,
only after 24 hours and as soon as the patient‘s condition
improves and if there is no vomiting.
Oral treatment should be given with Artemether +
Lumefantrine in the doses as indicated above.
However, if a patient has a history of intake of Artemether +
Lumefantrine before complications developed,
give Quinine tablets 10 mg salt per kg TID to complete 7 days
treatment
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Malaria in Pregnant Women
The first-line treatment for P. falciparum infection in pregnant
women in the first trimester of pregnancy is oral quinine
administered at 10 mg/kg (up to 600 mg) TID for 7 days
If pregnant women have P. falciparum or mixed infection and
are in their second or third trimester, Treated with
artemether-lumefantrine (AL).
Pregnant women with only P. vivax will be treated with
chloroquine in all trimesters
The recommended treatment for severe malaria in all
patients including pregnant women is artesunate infusion,
or alternatively quinine infusion or alternatively
artemether IM 08/14/2024
Drugs Used to Treat Malaria
• Chloroquine
• Amodiaquine
• Quinine and
• Mefloquine
• Halofantrine
• Atovaquone-proguanil
• Atemisinin derivatives
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Side effects and other precautions of antimalarial
AL: C/Is:
previous history of reaction after using the medicine;
pregnant women in the first trimester and infants less than 5
kg;
severeand complicated malaria should not be treated with oral
medications:
N.B. Artemether-lumefantrine should not be used
as malaria prophylaxis either alone or in
combination;
P/Cs: It should be stored at temperatures below 30°C.
Itshould not be removed from the blister if08/14/2024
it is not going to be
used immediately.
Cont...
Artesunate:
dizziness, tinnitus, neutropenia, elevated liver
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Cont...
Artemether:
headache, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, drug fever,
abnormal bleeding and dark urine.
NB: IM Artemether should only be used during the first
trimester of pregnancy when IV/IM artesunate (preferred) and
IV/IM quinine are both unavailable
Quinine: Cinchonism, headache, nausea, abdominal pain,
rashes, visual disturbances, confusion, blood disorders
(including thrombocytopenia and intra-vascular coagulation),
acute renal failure, and Hypoglycemia
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C/Is: Haemoglobinuria, optic neuritis
Cont...
Chloroquine phosphate:
gastro-intestinal disturbances, headache, also convulsions,
visual disturbances;
P/Cs: Avoid alcoholic beverages;
D/Is: Carbamazepine, digoxin, ethosuximide, mefloquine,
phenytoin and valproic acid.
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Primaquine;
ADRs: hemolytic anaemia, especially in patients with G6PD
deficiency;
P/Cs: In patients with G6PD deficiency; systemic diseases associated
with granulocytopenia, (e,g. rheumatoid arthritis, and pregnancy and
breast feeding).
It is recommended for patients with limited risk of malaria infection in
the future; for patients who are not living in malaria endemic areas.
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Sites of Action for Antimalarial
Drugs
TISSUE
SCHIZONTOCIDES:
primaquine
pyrimethamine
proguanil
tetracyclines
MOSQUITO HUMAN
BLOOD
SCHIZONTOCIDES
:
chloroquine
mefloquine
SPORONTOCIDES GAMETOCYTOCIDE quinine/quinidine
: S: tetracyclines
primaquine primaquine halofantrine
pyrimethamine sulfadoxine
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proguanil pyrimethamine
Antimalarial drug actions
Actions
Blood schizontocidal drugs (suppressive or
decreases transmission
Hypnozoitocidal – kill dormant hypnozoites in liver,
antirelapse drugs
Sporontocidal – inhibit development of oocysts in
returning.
Chloroquine or mefloquine – resistant
Doxycycline: 100mg QD
Chloroquine – or mefloquine – resistant
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Personal Protection
Protective clothing
Insect repellants
Household insecticide products
Window and door screens
Bed nets
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REFERANCE
WHO Guidelines for malaria pdf - 14 march 2023
Malaria Case Management Training Manual for Health
Professionals in Ethiopia pdf 2022
Standard Treatment guideline for general hospitals in
ethiopia 4th Edition. docx. 2020
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