Key words: Plasmodium falciparum -Plasmodium vivax -malaria -thrombocytopenia -plateletsMalaria and thrombocytopenia • Marcus Vinícius Guimarães Lacerda et al.
53Data on the real burden of thrombocytopenia associated with malaria is contradictory in the literature and it is not usually considered when conducting patient selection. Table I shows the major publications estimating the frequency of thrombocytopenia. Most of these data were published in the late 1990s, probably in time with the surge in the availability of affordable automated machines capable of performing full blood counts (FBC). Manual platelet counting is time-consuming and usually needs to be requested by the physician with the routine blood count in most of the endemic areas for malaria. In only three publications is there an adequate randomised enrollment of patients with appropriate sample size calculation to estimate the frequency of bleeding and its association with the respective platelet count (Lacerda 2007, Silva 2009, Kochar et al. 2010. Only one study has ruled out other common causes of thrombocytopenia that are also endemic in the studied area (Lacerda 2007). There is a wide range of thrombocytopenia occurrence in these reports, which may be explained by distinct selection criteria of the enrolled patients. There are also differences in the selection of outpatients or inpatients from tertiary care centres that tend to present with severe thrombocytopenia. Furthermore, clinical manifestations of thrombocytopenia are usually described as case reports and most of these are due to P. vivax (Table II).In 2005, 138 of 684 (20.1%) malarial cases hospitalised in a tertiary care centre in Manaus had thrombocytopenia as the cause of admission, which corresponded to 6.8% of hospitalisations due to all causes in this reference institution (unpublished observations). Hospitalisation, however, does not add any benefit to the patient and because there is no evidence for any intervention, this simply increases public health costs in underdeveloped and under-resourced areas.Pathogenesis of malarial thrombocytopenia -Coagulation disturbances -A study based on 31 American soldiers in Vietnam with chloroquine-resistant falciparum malaria noted the following changes in the acute phase of the disease using the same patients as their own controls during convalescence: decrease in the platelet count and prothrombim activation time, increase in the activated thromboplastin time, and reduction in factors V, VII and VIII with normal fibrinogen (Dennis et al. 1967). This report suggested that thrombocytopenia was simply a consequence of the coagulation disorders presented by these patients, an idea that persisted for many decades in the literature. In another series of 21 patients with falciparum malaria, six had developed disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). The authors noted that the patients with more severe thrombocytopenia also had DIC and that there was correlation between platelet count and C3 protein levels. However, the reduction in C3 was pr...
Thrombocytopenia may be occasionally observed in dengue fever (DF) but is a constant feature and one of the diagnostic criteria of dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF). Its clinical presentation and relevance is still poorly described in the literature. Patients with fever and bleeding were referred to a tertiary care center in Manaus, in the Western Brazilian Amazon during the outbreak of dengue in 2001. They were hospitalized for clinical observation and supportive care. Platelet counts were performed on admission and throughout the hospitalization. Only patients with a serological confirmation or viral isolation of the dengue virus were included. One hundred and seventy eight patients were enrolled in the study (118 with DF and 60 with DHF). There was no association between the presence of active bleeding and the degree of thrombocytopenia on admission (P = 0.302). A positive tourniquet test, hematemesis and ecchymoses were more frequent in DHF patients (P < 0.05). Patients with DHF had lower platelet counts than patients with DF (P < 0.001). There was a positive correlation between platelet counts and plasma albumin levels (r = 0.217; P = 0.016) and a negative correlation with ALT values (r = -0.3; P = 0.001). Clinical manifestations of thrombocytopenia are not related only to the number of peripheral platelets in dengue infection, but its recovery is associated with clinical improvement. The level of platelets correlates with the vascular leakage of proteins and liver damage.
Dermatophytosis is the most common skin infectious disturbance in the world. In this research 2,297 patients were evaluated with suspected clinical lesions of dermatophytosis. It was observed that, 534 (23.2%) patients tested positive for dermatophytes. T. rubrum was the most prevalent specie (49.6%; p < or = 0.05), followed by T. tonsurans (34.4%), M. canis (7%) and T. mentagrophytes (6.2%). When the species isolated was correlated with the respective anatomical localization, it was observed that T. tonsurans was the most frequent isolated in scalp lesions (73.9%; p < or = 0.01). On the other hand, T. rubrum was the main specie involved in body lesions (72.8%; p < or = 0.05). Therefore, in scalp infections it was observed that, there was an absolute prevalence of T. tonsurans. This evidence is different from the statistical data collected in the southeast and south of Brazil, as well as from other areas of the world, which still show M. canis as the most frequent microorganism isolated in Tinea capitis.
SUMMARYBurn mortality statistics may be misleading unless they account properly for the many factors that can influence outcome. Such estimates are useful for patients and others making medical and financial decisions concerning their care. This study aimed to define the clinical, microbiological and laboratorial predictors of mortality with a view to focus on better burn care. Data were collected using independent variables, which were analyzed sequentially and cumulatively, employing univariate statistics and a pooled, cross-sectional, multivariate logistic regression to establish which variables better predict the probability of mortality. Survivors and non-survivors among burn patients were compared to define the predictive factors of mortality. Mortality rate was 5.0%. Higher age, larger burn area, presence of fungi in the wound, shorter length of stay and the presence of multi-resistant bacteria in the wound significantly predicted increased mortality. The authors conclude that those patients who are most apt to die are those with age > 50 years, with limited skin donor sites and those with multi-resistant bacteria and fungi in the wound.
Fatores sócio-econômicos e atitudes em relação à prevenção domiciliar da leishmaniose tegumentar americana, em uma área endêmica do sul da Bahia, Brasil Socioeconomic factors and attitudes towards household prevention of American cutaneous leishmaniasis in an endemic area in southern Bahia, Brazil
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