Prevalence of asymptomatic malaria infections in selected military camps in Tanzania

Q4 Medicine
A. Kalinga, R. Kavishe, D. Ishengoma, G. Kagaruki, C. Mweya, Saidi Mgata, L. Mahikwano, Charles E Mwanziva, E. Kamau, M. Hickman, N. Waters, Mara Kreishman-Deitrick, Lucky Temu, Sarah Chiduo, Christopher Mswanya, George Amoo, C. Ohrt, B. Vesely
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Background: Despite a decrease in malaria burden reported between 2000 and 2015, an increasing trend of malaria transmission has been recently reported in some endemic countries including Tanzania. Periodic monitoring to identify pocket areas for asymptomatic Plasmodium falciparum infection   is vital for malaria elimination efforts. The objective of this study was to determine prevalence of asymptomatic malaria infections among military recruits in selected camps in Tanzania. Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted in 2015 at four military camps (Bulombora, Mgambo, Ruvu, and Rwamkoma) of National Service located in regions with varying malaria endemicity in Tanzania.  Finger prick blood samples collected from asymptomatic military recruits who had been at the camps for over two months were simultaneously tested using microscopy and malaria rapid diagnostic tests (mRDTs) to detect malaria parasite infections. Results: Malaria parasite prevalence among asymptomatic recruits was 20.3% and 19.4% by microscopy and mRDT respectively. There was moderate agreement (Kappa=0.724) between microscopy and mRDT test results. A significant difference (p<0.001) of malaria parasite prevalence among the four study camps was observed; ranging from 1.9% in Bulombora to 39.4% in Rwamkoma. The geometric mean parasite density was 11,053 asexual parasites/µl and most recruits (56.8%) had 200 to 1999 asexual parasites/µl. P. falciparum was the predominant (99.2%) malaria parasite species. Conclusion: Our study found high prevalence of asymptomatic malaria infections among military recruits in the selected camps, and this varied from one camp to another. The study has highlighted that public residence institutions such as military camps can be potential hotspots for malaria infection and therefore should not be skipped in routine national malaria surveillance system for monitoring trends of infections
坦桑尼亚选定军营中无症状疟疾感染的流行情况
背景:尽管2000年至2015年期间报告的疟疾负担有所减少,但最近在包括坦桑尼亚在内的一些流行国家报告的疟疾传播呈上升趋势。定期监测以确定无症状恶性疟原虫感染的口袋地区对消除疟疾的努力至关重要。本研究的目的是确定坦桑尼亚选定营地新兵中无症状疟疾感染的流行情况。方法:2015年在坦桑尼亚疟疾流行不同地区的4个国民服役军营(布隆博拉、姆甘博、鲁武和鲁瓦姆科马)进行了横断面研究。从在营地呆了两个多月的无症状新兵身上采集的手指刺血样本同时使用显微镜和疟疾快速诊断测试(mrdt)进行检测,以检测疟疾寄生虫感染。结果:无症状新兵的疟原虫镜检和mRDT检阳性率分别为20.3%和19.4%。显微镜和mRDT检测结果有中等程度的一致性(Kappa=0.724)。4个研究营间疟原虫流行率差异有统计学意义(p<0.001);从布隆博拉的1.9%到拉姆科马的39.4%不等。寄生虫几何平均密度为11053只/µl,大多数新兵(56.8%)有200 ~ 1999只/µl。恶性疟原虫为优势疟原虫(99.2%)。结论:本研究发现,各营区新兵无症状疟疾感染率较高,且各营区差异较大。该研究强调,军营等公共居住机构可能是疟疾感染的潜在热点,因此不应该在监测感染趋势的常规国家疟疾监测系统中被跳过
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来源期刊
Tanzania Journal of Health Research
Tanzania Journal of Health Research Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
0.20
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0.00%
发文量
20
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