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CLINICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF IMPORTED MALARIA IN JAPAN: ANALYSIS AT A REFERRAL HOSPITAL
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Citations
10
References
2005
Year
Disease ManagementParasitic DiseaseMedical RecordsClinical Infectious DiseaseEmerging Infectious DiseasesGlobal HealthMalariaClinical EpidemiologyInternational HealthVector-parasite RelationshipDisease OutbreakVector Borne DiseasePublic HealthPlasmodium FalciparumMedicineVivax Malaria CasesEpidemiologyParasitology
Imported malaria remains an important problem in Japan. We have reviewed the medical records of 170 cases of malaria in our hospital, which corresponds to 14.9% of the total cases in Japan. The predominant malarial species was Plasmodium falciparum (52.3%), and the most frequent area of acquisition was Africa (54.2%), followed by Asia (20.9%) and Oceania (19.6%). The most common reason for travel among Japanese patients was business. A significant proportion (22.2%) of vivax malaria cases experienced relapse despite standard primaquine therapy. Most primaquine failures were from Oceania. We also found that a substantial number of Japanese patients contracted malaria without chemoprophylaxis and consulted medical facilities with an unfavorably long delay from initial symptoms (median: 3.0 days). Direct education of travelers and travel companies, in addition to health care providers, is likely necessary to improve outcomes of imported malaria.
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