Malaria Falciparum: Relapse After a Decade

  • Doreswamy S
  • Al Sudani H
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Abstract

Malaria is an infection caused by the Plasmodium malaria (PM) parasite. There are still cases of malaria that are reported in the United States on an annual basis. All these cases were a result of travelers who did not receive or follow their prescribed chemoprophylaxis, recommendations for avoiding mosquito bites while traveling, or relapsed dormant plasmodium. The malaria parasite can be transmitted by the bite of an infected female mosquito, through contact with infected blood products, or from mother to child during pregnancy through the placenta. It can take anywhere from 12 to 20 days for symptoms to appear, but there are cases of delayed development and/or relapse that can occur up to 13 years after the infection. We report a 31-year-old female with a history of malarial infection in Liberia, which had been treated ten years prior to her arrival in the United States. She presented to the hospital with abdominal pain, fever, and headache. She was eventually diagnosed with plasmodium malaria infection relapse and treated with a 14-day course of primaquine 300 mg daily, with the symptoms resolving a few days after. We believe her malarial infection was caused by a dormant malarial parasite that evaded the immune system and relapsed without having a risk factor for relapse or re-infection 10 years after her original infection. Copyright © 2022, Doreswamy et al.

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Doreswamy, S., & Al Sudani, H. (2022). Malaria Falciparum: Relapse After a Decade. Cureus. https://doi.org/10.7759/cureus.26730

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