{"title":"Severe malaria in children at Port Moresby General Hospital, Papua New Guinea.","authors":"N Brown","doi":"","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>The demographic and clinical features of severe malaria in children on the south coast of Papua New Guinea have never been clearly documented. This prospective study sought to define the associations between ethnic origin, domain, age, nutritional status and severe malaria in this group and to assess significant clinical features, evaluate the use of a coma score as a prognostic indicator in cerebral malaria and to determine the ultimate outcome. Twenty patients with severe malaria (17 cerebral malaria and 3 severe anaemia) were studied. Their mean age of 4.96 years was significantly greater than that of matched controls with uncomplicated. Plasmodium falciparum infection with mean age 3.79 years (0.02 < p < 0.05). Nutritional status was not a significant independent risk factor when controlled against inpatients with other diagnoses. Low coma scores (Adelaide scale 4/14 or less) sensitively predicted the risk of dying vs survival. The mortality of 18% was comparable with other series. Current standard treatment with quinine and Fansidar was effective and no early recrudescence was encountered in the survivors. The degree of intermarriage and migration between regions precluded firm conclusions from being drawn as to the relevance of ethnic and geographical factors in the epidemiology of severe malaria in this region.</p>","PeriodicalId":76765,"journal":{"name":"Tropical and geographical medicine","volume":"47 3","pages":"107-10"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1995-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Tropical and geographical medicine","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The demographic and clinical features of severe malaria in children on the south coast of Papua New Guinea have never been clearly documented. This prospective study sought to define the associations between ethnic origin, domain, age, nutritional status and severe malaria in this group and to assess significant clinical features, evaluate the use of a coma score as a prognostic indicator in cerebral malaria and to determine the ultimate outcome. Twenty patients with severe malaria (17 cerebral malaria and 3 severe anaemia) were studied. Their mean age of 4.96 years was significantly greater than that of matched controls with uncomplicated. Plasmodium falciparum infection with mean age 3.79 years (0.02 < p < 0.05). Nutritional status was not a significant independent risk factor when controlled against inpatients with other diagnoses. Low coma scores (Adelaide scale 4/14 or less) sensitively predicted the risk of dying vs survival. The mortality of 18% was comparable with other series. Current standard treatment with quinine and Fansidar was effective and no early recrudescence was encountered in the survivors. The degree of intermarriage and migration between regions precluded firm conclusions from being drawn as to the relevance of ethnic and geographical factors in the epidemiology of severe malaria in this region.
巴布亚新几内亚南海岸儿童严重疟疾的人口统计学和临床特征从未有过明确的记录。这项前瞻性研究旨在确定该组患者的种族、领域、年龄、营养状况与严重疟疾之间的关系,并评估重要的临床特征,评估昏迷评分作为脑型疟疾预后指标的使用,并确定最终结果。对重症疟疾患者20例(脑型疟疾17例,重度贫血3例)进行了研究。他们的平均年龄为4.96岁,显著高于无并发症的匹配对照组。恶性疟原虫感染平均年龄3.79岁(0.02 < p < 0.05)。当与其他诊断的住院患者对照时,营养状况不是显著的独立危险因素。低昏迷评分(阿德莱德评分4/14或更低)敏感地预测死亡与生存的风险。死亡率为18%,与其他系列相当。目前使用奎宁和范西达的标准治疗是有效的,幸存者中没有遇到早期复发。区域间通婚和移徙的程度使人们无法得出关于种族和地理因素在该区域严重疟疾流行病学中的相关性的确切结论。