Publication | Closed Access
Malaria in Nigeria: a revisit
117
Citations
13
References
1990
Year
Rural ChildrenParasitic DiseaseGlobal HealthMalariaParasite DensitiesParasite ControlPathologyAsymptomatic ParasitaemiaVector-parasite RelationshipSoil-transmitted HelminthiasisVector Borne DiseasePublic HealthMedicineEpidemiologyParasitology
The frequency of asymptomatic malaria parasitaemia was investigated in rural and urban school-children aged six to 12 years in southwestern Nigeria between January 1987 and October 1988. Asymptomatic parasitaemia was detected in the rural school-children all year round with the lowest parasite rate in January and the highest in July, corresponding to the mid-dry and wet seasons respectively. Asymptomatic parasitaemia was also common amongst urban school-children, but the frequency was lower than in the rural children. Parasite density was less than or equal to 1000 microliters-1 in 42% of parasite-positive asymptomatic children and was greater than 10,000 microliters-1 in only 20% of them. Mass treatment with chloroquine, to which the parasites were fully sensitive, was followed by the same rate of re-infection in the parasite-positive and parasite-negative groups. Of 7713 patients clinically diagnosed as having malaria 4425 were found to have parasitologically-proven malaria, and of these 4239 had pure Plasmodium falciparum malaria. Of the patients with falciparum malaria only 4.6% were below the age of one year. In 47% the parasite count was less than or equal to 1000 microliters-1, and it was over 10,000 microliters-1 in 37% and over 250,000 microliters-1 in 16%. There was no significant difference between the asymptomatic children and the acutely ill patients in the percentage with parasite densities less than or equal to 1000 microliters-1, but the percentage with parasite densities greater than 10,000 microliters-1 was significantly greater in the acute malaria patients than in those with asymptomatic parasitaemia.
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