Malaria Diagnosis

QUESTION

How to identify malaria? My son has fever and headache for the past three days and also vomiting. Is treatment is necessary and what type of treatment he needs?

ANSWER

You need to take your son to the doctor or to a clinic where they can do a blood test to look for malaria. They will either look at his blood under a microscope or use his blood in a “rapid diagnostic test” (RDT), both of which can identify the presence of the malaria parasites in his blood. If he is positively diagnosed with malaria, then your son should receive treatment, probably a type of artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) – common brands include Coartem, Lonart and Alu (though there are many others). These are what the World Health Organisation recommends as first line treatment against non-severe malaria.

Given your son’s symptoms, you should certainly go for a malaria test, just in case. However, vomiting is not usually a symptoms associated with malaria, so it is also possible he has another infection, such as an intestinal parasite, or even a bacterial or viral infection. Unfortunately, the symptoms of malaria are very general, so you really need to have one of the blood tests I mention above in order to be sure that your son has malaria.

Paracetamol to Control Fever

QUESTION

If I take paracetamol to help control my temperature will it affect my blood test results— can they fail to detect the plasmodium?

ANSWER

No—taking paracetamol (also called acetaminophen, and sold variously as Tylenol, Panadol and other brand names) is a good way to control your temperature during malaria infection, and it won’t affect your blood test results. If you haven’t done this already, if you think you have malaria you should go to a doctor or clinic to get a blood test for diagnosis. Once you have been positively diagnosed, you can be given appropriate treatment, probably one of a number of available artemisinin-based combination therapies (such as Coartem, Alu, Lonart, etc).

Malarial Attack Recurring

QUESTION

My Father aged 65 years was diagnosed with malaria 15 days back and was on medication. Fever was recurring frequently and he had developed a lung infection. Three days back fever stopped and did not occur for 2 days and malarial infection was reducing. Now the Fever has started coming but other parameters are normal. Can you please suggest what needs to be done?

ANSWER

If your father also developed a lung infection, was he treated with antibiotics? If not, his later fever could be caused by that infection, and could be unrelated to the malaria.

He should have another blood test, to look for the malaria parasites; if they are still present, then you should talk to his doctor about trying another type of anti-malarial medication—the World Health Organization recommends artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs), such as Coartem, Alu and Duo-Cotecxin, as the first-line treatment against uncomplicated malaria.

However, given that your father appears to have concurrent other medical conditions, it may be that other treatment is more appropriate, and as such it is very important that you check with your doctor before taking additional medication.

Malaria Treatment with Fansidar

QUESTION

My husband has Malaria following a trip to Kenya and has had a fever for three days. We are in Russia and the only drug available at the pharmacy was Fansidar (we also have some Doxcycyclin). He took three Fansidar tablets last night and feels better but the fever has still not completely gone. What should we do? Take more Fansidar? Thanks for your help.

ANSWER

A single dose of three tablets is the correct amount for an adult over 45kg in weight—do not take any more. Unfortunately, Fansidar is not recommended as the first-line drug against malaria any more since many strains of P. falciparum (the most dangerous type of malaria, and the most common type in Kenya) now have resistance to Fansidar. This could be one reason why the treatment is not fully successful, though it could also be that the treatment has worked, but it will take a day or two more before your husband fully recovers.

Make sure your husband takes in plenty of fluids, and anti-inflammatory drugs such as ibuprofen might help with the fever and any aches he could also be suffering from.

If your husband is still feeling sick after a few days, you should try to have another blood test to see if the malaria parasites are still present in his blood. If you, you should try to find an artemisinin-based combination therapy, such as Coartem, Duo-Cotecxin or Alu. These are the most effective medications against malaria that are currently available, and are recommended as first-line treatment by the World Health Organization (for uncomplicated malaria).

How is Malaria Treated

QUESTION

how is malaria treated?

ANSWER

Malaria can be a severe, potentially fatal disease (especially when caused by Plasmodium falciparum) and treatment should be initiated as soon as possible.

Patients who have severe P. falciparum malaria or who cannot take oral medications should be given the treatment by continuous intravenous infusion.

Most drugs used in treatment are active against the parasite forms in the blood (the form that causes disease) and include:

  • chloroquine
  • atovaquone-proguanil (Malarone®)
  • artemether-lumefantrine (Coartem®)
  • mefloquine (Lariam®)
  • quinine
  • quinidine
  • doxycycline (used in combination with quinine)
  • clindamycin (used in combination with quinine)
  • artesunate (not licensed for use in the United States, but available through the CDC malaria hotline)

In addition, primaquine is active against the dormant parasite liver forms (hypnozoites) and prevents relapses. Primaquine should not be taken by pregnant women or by people who are deficient in G6PD (glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase). Patients should not take primaquine until a screening test has excluded G6PD deficiency.

How to treat a patient with malaria depends on:

  • The type (species) of the infecting parasite
  • The area where the infection was acquired and its drug-resistance status
  • The clinical status of the patient
  • Any accompanying illness or condition
  • Pregnancy
  • Drug allergies, or other medications taken by the patient

If you have or suspect you have malaria, you should contact your doctor immediately.

Is Malaria Incurable?

QUESTION

is malaria incurable?

ANSWER

No. Malaria can usually be very easily treated, if diagnosed early and if appropriate medication is given promptly.

The World Health Organization recommends artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) as the first line treatment against uncomplicated malaria; intravenous quinine is usually the first-line recommended treatment for severe, complicated malaria.

Relapsing Malaria

QUESTION

I’m constantly on malaria drugs, fall ill every 2 weeks and always diagnosed with malaria.I’m getting really fed up and need a permanent solution to all of this. I want to live a healthy life and I’m tired of being on malaria drugs. How do I overcome malaria permanently?

ANSWER

It is very unusual to be reinfected so constantly with malaria. First of all, how are you getting diagnosed? You should be getting a blood test, and not relying on symptoms only; the symptoms of malaria are very general and it could be that you are suffering from something else entirely.

The two main methods for accurate diagnosis are blood smear and rapid diagnostic test. The blood smear is used throughout the world, but can sometimes miss light infections (though if you feel sick, your infection is likely heavy enough to be detected by this method). The problem is that it requires a trained technician to take the sample, prepare it properly, and read it thoroughly and accurately. In my experience, many clinics, especially if they are rushed and busy, will not take the time to read a blood slide properly, and will just diagnose malaria without looking. This is really bad!

It is very important to be properly diagnosed, so you can get the correct treatment, and if you don’t have malaria, you can be diagnosed for something else. The second kind of diagnostic is a rapid diagnostic test, or RDT. This looks for antibodies to malaria in your blood, and is very sensitive and quick. In an ideal world, you should try to have both done, to cross-check the results.

The next thing is to check whether you are receiving the correct treatment for the type of malaria that you have (if you are positively diagnosed with malaria). In many parts of the world, malaria has become resistant to some of the main medications used against it. Notably, this is the case in many places with Plasmodium falciparum, the most dangerous kind of malaria, which has become resistant to chloroquine in many parts of the world, to sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (sold as Fansidar in many places) and also to mefloquine (sold as Lariam) in some places. As such, the World Health Organisation NEVER recommends these treatments be given as first line drugs against P. falciparum malaria—instead, they recommend artemisinin-combination therapies (ACTs), such as Alu, Coartem or Duo-Cotecxin. If you have been diagnosed with P. falciparum, you must try to take these kinds of drugs first. No resistance to ACTs has been reported, so if you take the full dose correctly, as prescribed by your doctor (and check to make sure the drugs are not expired), then you should be cured of malaria.

However, treatment does not stop you from getting infected again, and this is where prevention comes it. Preventing malaria is a cornerstone of control efforts. Since malaria is transmitted by a mosquito, preventing mosquitoes from entering the house, and particularly stopping them from biting you at night, is crucial. Screening all doors and windows can help stop mosquitoes from getting in, and in high transmission areas, many people will also spray inside their houses every once in a while with insecticides to kill any lingering insects.

In addition, sleeping under a long-lasting insecticide treated bednet can drastically reduce the number of mosquitoes that are able to bite you at night. If you already have a net, it may be worth re-dipping it in insecticide (usually permethrin) to make sure it is still working effectively. The mosquitoes that transmit malaria feed at night, so if you are walking around outside in the evenings or at night, it is important to try to wear long-sleeved clothing, to prevent them from accessing your skin.

All of these efforts will help prevent you from getting malaria again in the future.

Malaria Fever

QUESTION

My Father aged 65 years was diagnosed with 2 types of malaria almost a week back. he has been given medicines but temperature is fluctuating and not coming down. all other organs are functionining properly except platelet count which is little less.

Now he has been suggested new medicines for a duration of 14 days.
How fast can he recover from this malaria and when will the fever come down?

ANSWER

When patients are given the appropriate treatment against malaria, the fever is usually reduced very quickly and the patient will start to recover after a few days. The right kind of treatment depends on the severity of the infection and the type (or, in your father’s case, types) of malaria the patient is infected with.

If your father was infected with P. falciparum alongside another type of malaria (probably P. vivax, P. malariae or P. ovale), then he should have first received an artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) drug first. These drugs combine artemisinin or a derivative (such as artemether, artesunate or dihydroartemisinin) with another anti-malarial, such as lumefantrine. Common brand names of these ACTs include Coartem, Alu and Duo-Cotecxin.

There are no reported cases of resistance to these combination therapies at present, so if your father continued to feel sick after completing this treatment, he should be re-tested for malaria; it is possible that the malaria parasites were killed, and his continuing fever was an after effect either of the medication or just an indication that the body was recovering from the infection.

If he was re-tested and found positive, then other second-line drugs can be prescribed. However, it is important to note that malaria is resistant to chloroquine in many areas, and so this drug is not suitable for treatment in these places. Similarly, resistance is widespread to sulfadoxine-pyrimethamines, such as Fansidar, and in south-east Asia, P. falciparum is also resistant to mefloquine (Lariam) in some cases. As such, your father’s doctor should be careful to prescribe him an appropriate treatment for the area in which he is living.

In addition, if your father was found to be co-infected with either P. vivax or P. ovale, then there is a chance of later relapse into malaria again, weeks or even months after the initial infection has been treated. This is because the parasites in these types of malaria can form dormant stages in the liver, where they escape being killed by the normal forms of treatment. In this case, your father should ask about the possibility of being treated with primaquine; the course is normally 14 days, so it may be that this is what his doctors have currently given him. If so, this will kill the dormant liver stages and prevent relapse. Prior to taking primaquine, patients should be tested for G6DP deficiency, as patients with this condition may become dangerously anaemic when they take primaquine.

Curing Malaria

QUESTION

What is needed to cure malaria?

ANSWER

Malaria is usually cured through treatment with an anti-malarial drug. The World Health Organization recommends use of an ACT (artemisinin-based combination therapy, such as Coartem) as first-line treatment for all non-complicated (i.e. not severe) malaria, and especially P. falciparum malaria (which in most places is resistance to chloroquine, and also to mefloquine in some locations). For complicated, severe malaria, or in cases where the patient is unable to take medication orally, the recommended treatment is intravenous quinine.

Treatment and Management of Malaria Parasite

QUESTION

What are the treatments and management of malaria?

ANSWER

Treatment is actually part of the strategy for managing malaria, so I will come back to that later. The other main ways in which malaria is controlled is through prevention, diagnosis (followed by treatment if necessary) and education.

1) Prevention:

There are a number of ways to prevent malaria. These can be placed into two categories: medication and vector protection.

For medication, there are drugs you can take to prevent the malaria parasite from developing after someone is bitten by an infected mosquito. These drugs are known as “chemoprophylaxis.”

There are several different kinds, such as doxycycline, mefloquine (marketed as Lariam), atovaquone-proguanil (marketed as Malarone) and chloroquine—the type you use depends on the type of malaria present in the area. For example, in much of Africa and India, malaria is resistant to chloroquine, so this cannot be used as a prophylactic. In parts of Thailand, resistance to mefloquine has emerged. However, if the appropriate type of prophylaxis is used, it is very effective against malaria.

The problem is that these drugs have not been tested for long-term use, can be expensive and may have side-effects. Therefore they are of limited use for people who live in areas where malaria is endemic, and are more appropriate for travelers who are in malarial areas for short amounts of time. However, anti-malarial medication may be used in a very specific way for people at particularly high-risk for malaria, such as pregnant women and young children. In these cases, the high-risk individuals receive a dose or series of doses of malaria medication in order to prevent malaria. This form of prevention is known as intermittent preventive therapy (IPT).

Vector prevention involves protecting oneself against getting bitten by mosquitoes. This can involve wearing long-sleeved clothing in the evenings and at night, when malaria mosquitoes are most active, or wearing insect repellent on exposed skin. Indoor residual spraying, whereby repellent and insecticides are sprayed inside the house, can also be used to bring down the number of mosquitoes.

Another very effective technique for preventing malaria is to sleep under a long-lasting insecticide-treated bednet. The mesh acts as a barrier against the mosquitoes, and the insecticide impregnated in the mesh further repels the mosquitoes and prevents them from biting through the mesh.

2) Diagnosis

Diagnosis is considered a crucial step in controlling malaria, since it ensures that people are receiving correct medication, whether for malaria or for another condition which is causing their symptoms. Currently, the most commonly observed form of diagnosis is through microscopy of thick and thin blood films, which can be stained if necessary. These should be read by a qualified technician to determine both the species of malaria infection and the intensity of parasitaemia (number of parasites in the blood).

More recently, other methods for diagnosis have emerged. These include the use of rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) which utilize a drop of blood applied to a reagent strip which very quickly reacts to show whether the patient is infected with malaria. While considered generally more sensitive than blood films, some RDTs don’t test for all types of malaria parasite, and many require that the reagents be kept cold in order for the test to be effective, which can be a problem in some developing countries.

Perhaps the most sensitive test for malaria is through PCR, which can theoretically detect a single malaria parasite in a drop of blood, and also determine the species. However, measures of infection intensity require an alternative form of PCR, called real-time PCR, which can be technologically challenging. All forms of PCR require a lot of expensive equipment and reagents, trained technicians and take several hours to run.

3) Treatment

Malaria treatment can be determined based on the diagnostic results, as well as other factors, such as:

  • The area where the infection was acquired and its drug-resistance status
  • The clinical status of the patient
  • Any accompanying illness or condition
  • Pregnancy
  • Drug allergies, or other medications taken by the patient

Most uncomplicated (i.e. not severe) cases of P. falciparum can be treated with oral medication, such as artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs). Artemisinin is given in combination with another anti-malarial drug in order to prevent resistance from developing in the parasite. Patients who have complicated (severe) P. falciparum malaria or who cannot take oral medications should be given the treatment by continuous intravenous infusion, with quinine recommended by WHO as the first-line treatment.

Other drugs, which are used in some settings, are considered second-line or alternative forms of treatment. These include:

  • chloroquine (very rarely used for P. falciparum, due to widespread resistance)
  • atovaquone-proguanil (Malarone®)
  • mefloquine (Lariam®)
  • quinine
  • quinidine
  • doxycycline (used in combination with quinine)
  • clindamycin (used in combination with quinine)

In addition, primaquine is active against the dormant parasite liver forms (hypnozoites) and prevents relapses, for patients with P. vivax or P. ovale malaria. Primaquine should not be taken by pregnant women or by people who are deficient in G6PD (glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase). Patients should not take primaquine until a screening test has excluded G6PD deficiency.

4) Education

Through education, people living in at-risk areas for malaria transmission can learn about ways to prevent the disease (see above), as well as what to do if they suspect they are infected (i.e. seek diagnosis). Similarly, education is important for travellers visiting malarial areas, so they know the best ways in which to avoid being infected.