Unlabelled: Background&objectives: Changes in parasite biology, particularly the gametocytogenesis process, could be one of the important contributing factors for worldwide malaria resurgence. The present study investigated the prevalence rates of pretreatment gametocyte carriage and density in Plasmodium falciparum and P. vivax infections in the low malaria-endemic area on the Thai-Myanmar border.
Methods: One hundred and twenty-six blood samples were collected from patients with signs and symptoms of malaria who attended malaria clinics. Malaria positive cases detected by microscopic examination were confirmed by species-specific nested-PCR in 97 (29 and 68 samples for P. falciparum and P. vivax, respectively).
Results: The proportion of P. vivax and P. falciparum-infected samples was 70.1: 29.9%. The density in P. falciparum positive samples [median (95%CI): 10,340 (5280-19,200) μ/l] was significantly higher than P. vivax positive samples [4508 (3240-6120) μ/l]. Sixteen out of twenty-nine (55.2%) and 36 out of 68 (52.9%) P. falciparum- and P. vivax-infected samples, respectively, were gametocyte-positive. Gametocyte density in the P. falciparum-infected[124 (69-253) /μl] was significantly higher than that of the P. vivax-infected [54 (45-70)/μl] samples. A significant correlation between gametocyte density and pretreatment parasitemia was only detected in P. falciparum-infected, but not P. vivax-infected samples.
Interpretation & Conclusion: The observed high prevalence rates of pretreatment gametocyte carriage of both malaria species, which serves as a large malaria reservoir, particularly in P. falciparum infection, could have a significant impact on malaria control in the endemic populations.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0972-9062.316274 | DOI Listing |
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