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Clinical Features and Mortality Associated with Severe Malaria in Adults in Southern Mauritania.

Boushab Mohamed BoushabMohamed Salem Ould Ahmedou SalemAli Ould Mohamed Salem BoukharyPhilippe ParolaLeonardo K Basco
Published in: Tropical medicine and infectious disease (2020)
Severe malaria in adults is not well-studied in Sahelian Africa. Clinical features and mortality associated with severe Plasmodium falciparum malaria in adult patients hospitalized in Kiffa, southern Mauritania, were analysed. Patients over 15 years old admitted for severe malaria between August 2016 and December 2019 were included in the present retrospective study. The World Health Organization (WHO) criteria were used to define severe malaria. The presenting clinical characteristics and outcome were compared. Of 4266 patients hospitalized during the study period, 573 (13.4%) had a positive rapid diagnostic test for malaria, and 99 (17.3%; mean age, 37.5 years; range 15-79 years; sex-ratio M/F, 2.1) satisfied the criteria for severe malaria. On admission, the following signs and symptoms were observed in more than one-fourth of the patients: fever (98%), impairment of consciousness (81.8%), multiple convulsions (70.7%), cardiovascular collapse (61.6%), respiratory distress (43.4%), severe anaemia ≤ 80 g/L (36.4%), haemoglobinuria (27.3%), and renal failure (25.3%). Patients were treated with parenteral quinine or artemether. Fourteen (14.1%) patients died. Multiple convulsions, respiratory distress, severe anaemia, haemoglobinuria.
Keyphrases
  • end stage renal disease
  • plasmodium falciparum
  • newly diagnosed
  • ejection fraction
  • chronic kidney disease
  • prognostic factors
  • emergency department
  • type diabetes
  • risk factors
  • iron deficiency