Do I have malaria?

QUESTION:

Hi, I went to Ivory Coast August/2003 back March/2004, took some pills to help prevent Malaria on my trip but ran out and did not get more. While I was there I got many mosquito bites.

Around October/03 became very sick, got tested for malaria at the hospital in Quebec but negative. Now May/2011 still have all the same symptoms, flu like symptoms, feeling cold most of the time, chills headaches, tired.

Is there any way I got it? I’ve gone to doctors and doctors and no one can seem to find what is causing this? I am tired of taking tylenols all the time for the body ache. My wife is from there and she’s so sure that I got it from seeing how I am since she’s been around it all her life. Can you help me?

ANSWER:

There are definitely types of malaria that can cause relapses of symptoms many months or even years after an initial infection. These types are not common in the Ivory Coast but if you had many mosquito bites then it is certainly possible that you were exposed. What kind of test did you have for malaria when you returned to Canada?

Often, the test is by looking at a microscope slide of your blood under the microscope—the problem with this test is that it is not very sensitive for low levels of malaria, for example, after the worst of infection, and especially with the types of malaria that cause relapse (these types, P. ovale and P. malariae being the ones you might expect from Ivory Coast, tend to cause less severe illness than the more common type of malaria in Africa, called P. falciparum, doesn’t relapse in the same way, but results in much higher levels of the malaria parasite in the blood, which makes it easier to diagnose on blood slides). Also, since malaria is relatively rare in northern countries like Canada, laboratory technicians are not as experienced at diagnosing the parasite as they are in countries where malaria is endemic.

Having said that, there are of course lots of other illnesses which also cause symptoms similar to that of malaria – fevers, chills, etc. What I would recommend is that you re-visit the doctor, and ask for a more sophisticated test for malaria. Mention that you have had a relapse of symptoms—this should prompt them to use more sensitive tests, such as PCR or a rapid diagnostic test, and to look specifically for P. ovale or P. malariae. Not only will this answer your question about whether you have malaria, but it will allow the doctors to give you the appropriate treatment for your current symptoms (probably chloroquine) as well as treatment to prevent any further relapses (primequine).

Hope this helps!

Can malaria come back?

QUESTION:

If you had malaria once, can it return for a second time without being in a malaria area?

ANSWER:

Yes. There are several ways in which malaria can come back without being re-infected again. The blood forms of the parasites can sometimes persist at low numbers, so that the patient no longer has any symptoms; if these blood forms begin to reproduce again, the patient will once again begin to feel sick and have malaria symptoms. This is known as ‘recrudescence’ and can occur as quickly as within the same year as the initial infection but also as long as fifty years later, depending on the type of malaria! Treating the infection thoroughly, and being tested for parasites after treatment, is one way to avoid recrudescence.

The other way in which malaria can come back is through ‘recurrence’, which is when the malaria parasite enters a dormant phase which resides in the liver. Again, the patient will feel no symptoms while the malaria is dormant, but once these liver stages change into the blood stages and reproduce, symptoms will reoccur. This form of relapse only occurs with Plasmodium vivax and P. ovale infections, and can be prevented through taking an additional form of medication, called primequine, at the same time as the normal malaria drugs when diagnosed. This extra medicine kills the liver forms of malaria and thus prevents recurrence. For more details on this, please see the comments I made, on behalf of Dr Etty Villanueva, on the post ‘Malaria Symptoms and Causes’, published on the 22nd of February, 2011.

Treatment for Malaria

QUESTION:

How do you treat malaria?

ANSWER:

Malaria can be treated with a number of different types of medication; which one to use depends on the type of malaria you have, as well as whether resistant strains are known to occur in your area. Below I have copied the response I wrote to a similar question on malaria treatment, posted on the 2nd of May, 2011:

In most cases of non-Plasmodium falciparum malaria (the most deadly form of malaria, found throughout the world but most prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa), and even in some places where P. falciparum has not yet developed resistance, treatment with chloroquine is sufficient.

The dosage will depend on body weight (usually approximated by age). Where there is a risk of chloroquine-resistant malaria occurring, treatment of non-complicated cases will usually consist of orally-administered artemisinin-based combination therapy (or ACT) – again, the dosage will depend on age/weight.

For severe malaria, parenteral ingestion of drugs is required. For the treatment of cerebral malaria, caused by P. falciparum, quinine is the traditional drug of choice, though artemisinin has also been shown to be effective. Anti-convulsants and anti-pyretics (to reduce fever) should also be administered.

In cases of infection with P. vivax or P. ovale, the parasite can become dormant in the liver and result in a relapse of the disease if not treated properly. As such, patients with either of these forms of malaria should also be treated with primaquine.

If you have, or suspect you have a health problem, you should visit a physician for a medical diagnosis and treatment.

Treatment for malaria in Africa

QUESTION:

What is the treatment for malaria in Africa?

ANSWER:

The appropriate form of treatment for malaria, regardless of where you are, depends on the type of malaria you have. This can be determined through diagnosis; each of the main malaria parasites that ordinarily infect humans (P. falciparum, P. vivax, P. malariae and P. ovale) looks slightly different under the microscope, although you have to be well trained to tell them apart! Rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) can also sometimes distinguish between malaria species, although many RDTs only test for P. falciparum, he most acute, severe and deadly of the species.

In much of Africa, P. falciparum is the most common and dangerous form of the disease. In some places, it can be treated with chloroquine, though in many places the parasite has developed resistance to this drug, so other treatment is necessary.

The most common drugs given in areas with known chloroquine-resistant strains of P. falciparum are ACTs (artemisinin-based combined therapies). There are some parts of Africa where other forms of malaria, such as P. ovale and P. vivax, can also occur – it is important to know whether a patient is infected with these species as they require an additional form of treatment, the drug primequine, in order to kill dormant liver stages that characterise these species and can lead to a relapse of infection months or even years after the initial exposure.