Decreased platelet count is an early phenomenon in asexual Plasmodium falciparum parasitemia, but its association with acute or long-term functional changes in platelets and coagulation is unknown. Moreover, the impact of gametocytemia on platelets and coagulation remains unclear. We investigated the changes in platelet number and function during early asexual parasitemia, gametocytemia and convalescence in 16 individuals participating in a controlled human malaria infection study, and studied its relationship with changes in total and active von Willebrand factor levels (VWF) and the coagulation system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Fever and inflammation are a hallmark of clinical Plasmodium falciparum (Pf) malaria induced by circulating asexual parasites. Although clinical manifestations of inflammation are associated with parasite density, this relationship is influenced by a complex network of immune-modulating factors of both human and parasite origin.
Methods: In the Controlled Human Malaria infection (CHMI) model, we compared clinical inflammation in healthy malaria-naïve volunteers infected by either Pf-infected mosquito bites (MB, n=12) or intravenous administration of Pf-infected red blood cells (BS, n=12).
Cellular aging is difficult to study in individuals with natural infection, given the diversity of symptom duration and clinical presentation, and the high interference of aging-related processes with host and environmental factors. To address this challenge, we took advantage of the controlled human malaria infection (CHMI) model. This approach allowed us to characterize the relationship among cellular aging markers prior, during and post malaria pathophysiology in humans, controlling for infection dose, individual heterogeneity, previous exposure and co-infections.
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