What happens after you get malaria?

QUESTION

What are the after effects of malaria?

ANSWER

In almost all cases, if malaria is diagnosed accurately and treated promptly, patients make a full recovery with no after effects. In some cases of severe malaria, the disease can develop into cerebral malaria, which can result in impaired mental function, loss of consciousness and coma (and, if untreated, even death). Again, if treated promptly, these effects should reverse, but in some cases, some neurological damage remains.

Similarly, children who are affected by malaria while still in the womb or during birth (“congenital” malaria) may experience low birth weight or retarded growth, which can have health implications later in life.

How to get malaria?

QUESTION

How do we get malaria?

ANSWER

Malaria is caused by a parasite called Plasmodium, which is transmitted via the bites of infected mosquitoes. In the human body, the parasites multiply in the liver, and then infect red blood cells. Usually, people get malaria by being bitten by an infective female Anopheles mosquito. Only Anopheles mosquitoes can transmit malaria and they must have been infected through a previous blood meal taken on an infected person. When a mosquito bites an infected person, a small amount of blood is taken in which contains microscopic malaria parasites. About 1 week later, when the mosquito takes its next blood meal, these parasites mix with the mosquito’s saliva and are injected into the person being bitten.

Because the malaria parasite is found in red blood cells of an infected person, malaria can also be transmitted through blood transfusion, organ transplant, or the shared use of needles or syringes contaminated with blood. Malaria may also be transmitted from a mother to her unborn infant before or during delivery (“congenital” malaria).

Teen Has Anaemia, Mom Had Malaria

QUESTION

I am concerned that my 22 yr old daughter has anaemia (tired & sleepy), possibly caused by Malaria (Katima Mulilo, Namibia), which I contracted just before returning to Cape Town.

I fell pregnant at that time. I was treated at the local hospital before returning home. Could it have affected the unborn fetus? My daughter has a low red blood count.

ANSWER

Congenital malaria occurs when a foetus is infected with malaria from the mother, either through transmission across the placenta or during childbirth. It can cause serious complications for the foetus, including spontaneous abortion, low birth weight and anaemia.

However, I don’t think there is any evidence that anaemia persists later into life—usually congenital malaria only affects newborns a few weeks after birth.

One of our maternal/child health experts says that she knows of one study (mentioned in the Tanzania Journal of Health Research) which suggests that immune priming due to congenital malaria could result in longer term effects in infancy and childhood—however, anaemia is not mentioned specifically and the article emphasises that more study is required to confirm this hypothesis.

Our advisory expert also says that anaemia is common in teenage and pubescent girls, and it is important to confirm the anaemia with a haemaglobin blood test, and get advice regarding improving her diet and perhaps taking iron supplements if indeed she is anaemic.

Causes of Malaria

QUESTION

What causes malaria?

ANSWER

Malaria is caused by a parasite called Plasmodium, which is transmitted via the bites of infected mosquitoes. In the human body, the parasites multiply in the liver, and then infect red blood cells.

Usually, people get malaria by being bitten by an infective female Anopheles mosquito. Only Anopheles mosquitoes can transmit malaria and they must have been infected through a previous blood meal taken on an infected person. When a mosquito bites an infected person, a small amount of blood is taken in which contains microscopic malaria parasites. About 1 week later, when the mosquito takes its next blood meal, these parasites mix with the mosquito’s saliva and are injected into the person being bitten.

Because the malaria parasite is found in red blood cells of an infected person, malaria can also be transmitted through blood transfusion, organ transplant, or the shared use of needles or syringes contaminated with blood. Malaria may also be transmitted from a mother to her unborn infant before or during delivery (“congenital” malaria).

 


 

Person to Person Malaria Transmission

QUESTION:

If someone had malaria but they don’t have it any more can they give it to someone else?

ANSWER:

Regardless of whether a person is still infected with malaria or not, malaria can almost never be transmitted directly from one person to another.

Normally, malaria is only transmitted via infected mosquitoes; so, a mosquito has to bite an infected person, and then bite another person, and the malaria parasites are transmitted via the mosquito’s saliva to the second person. The exception to this is blood transfusions; in area where blood is not thoroughly screened, there have been cases of a person becoming infected with malaria after having received blood from a person with a malaria infection.

Secondly, although the actual disease cannot be transmitted this way, pregnant women who are infected with malaria can pass antigens and antibodies to their unborn child via the placenta, which can cause problems to the baby. For this reason, and others, preventing malaria in pregnant women is a huge priority in global malaria prevention.

REVIEW: The Use of Intermittent Preventive Treatment in Pregnancy to Protect Against Malaria Infection

Review of Le Port A, et al. (2011), ‘Prevention of Malaria during Pregnancy: Assessing the Effect of the Distribution of IPTp Through the National Policy in Benin’,  American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, Vol 84 (Issue 2): pp 270-275

[Read more…]

Does malaria spread from a person to another?

QUESTION:

Can malaria spread from one person to another?

ANSWER:

Usually, no. In most cases, the malaria parasite has to first pass from a human host into a mosquito as the mosquito takes a blood meal, and then from the mosquito into another human via the mosquito’s saliva. This severely limits the amount of person-to-person transmission that exists. In fact, the only mechanisms for direct transmission between humans are when malaria parasites are passed between a mother and her unborn child via the placenta (congenital transmission) and through unscreened blood transfusions.

Congenital malaria is the more common type of human-to-human transmission; across various surveys of newborns in West Africa, between 8-24% were found to be infected with malaria parasites.

All four main species of human malaria (P. falciparum, P. vivax, P. ovale and P. malariae) have been implicated in congenital transmission. Infection with malaria during pregnancy not only puts the mother at greater risk of severe disease episodes (probably through reduced immunocompetence during pregnancy) but may also negatively impact the baby; although in endemic areas it is rare for babies to be symptomatic for malaria when acquired congenitally, even if they have parasitaemia, they have been shown to have a higher mortality rate than non-infected newborns. In non-endemic areas, babies with congenital malaria often display symptoms, which usually manifest themselves between 2 and 8 weeks after birth. Both quinine and artemisinin-based therapies have been successfully used to treat congenital malaria.

Malaria infection as a result of blood transfusion was first identified in 1911 and is one of the most common illness transmitted via transfusion, although the risk of being infected, particularly in non-endemic countries, is very low.

As it is difficult to screen blood directly for malaria infection, a number of standards have been put in place by blood-collection services to reduce the risk of obtaining blood containing malaria parasites. For example, in many places, you will not be allowed to donate whole blood if you have visited an endemic malarial region in the last three months, nor should you donate if you have previously had malaria unless you have been symptom-free for at least three years.

Due to the longevity of Plasmodium malariae in the blood, you are unlikely to be able to donate blood if you have ever been confirmed as positive for P. malariae. Serological screening of blood for malaria antibodies has recently been shown to be a sensitive method for testing for malaria in blood, although it is expensive and therefore not cost-effective for screening every sample, especially in non-endemic countries. However, it can be effective and efficient to avoid wastage when employed together with a travel-based questionnaire to ascertain donors who are high-risk for malaria.

It is worth mentioning that transmission of malaria via plasma only is very uncommon, and so frequent travellers or residents in malarial areas, who may be denied the right to donate whole blood, should ask about the possibility of donating plasma instead.