Publication | Open Access
Frequent Umbilical Cord–Blood and Maternal‐Blood Infections with<i>Plasmodium falciparum, P. malariae,</i>and<i>P. ovale</i>in Kenya
62
Citations
24
References
2000
Year
Molecular Diagnostic TechniquesMedicineMalariaHematologyClinical EpidemiologyParasite GenomicsMaternal HealthVector-parasite RelationshipCord BloodPublic HealthPlasmodium FalciparumPcr PrevalenceUmbilical Cord—blood SamplesFrequent Umbilical Cord–bloodEpidemiologyParasitologyP. Malariae
The prevalence of malaria infection in 102 paired maternal-blood and umbilical cord—blood samples was assessed by microscopy and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in a holoendemic area in Kenya. Plasmodium falciparum single-species infection was detected in maternal peripheral blood (3.4%), whereas microscopy indicated that no Plasmodium species were in cord blood. In contrast, maternal-blood samples showed a PCR prevalence of 48% for P. falciparum, 25% for P. malariae, and 24% for P. ovale, and cord-blood samples showed a PCR prevalence of 32%, 23%, and 21%, respectively. Although mothers with mixed-species infections were more likely to have offspring infected with mixed species, the specific malaria species were discordant in paired maternal- and cord-blood samples. Triple-species infections were observed in 11 cord- and maternal-blood samples at a 5.5-fold greater frequency than expected. These findings indicate that Plasmodium species infections in cord blood are common, occur at lower densities, and may be acquired before parturition.
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