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. 2004 Jun;70(6):642-4.

A retrospective examination of reinfection of humans with Plasmodium vivax

Affiliations
  • PMID: 15211006

A retrospective examination of reinfection of humans with Plasmodium vivax

William E Collins et al. Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2004 Jun.

Abstract

A retrospective examination was made of archival data collected between 1940 and 1963 to determine the impact of reinfection of patients with Plasmodium vivax with homologous and heterologous strains of the parasite. Following reinfection of 14 patients with a homologous strain, the geometric mean maximum parasite count was reduced from 9,101/microL during the primary infection to 998/microL and the geometric mean daily parasite count for the first 20 days was reduced from 923/microL to 16/microL. Following reinfection of 22 patients with heterologous strains of P. vivax, the geometric mean maximum parasite count was 8,460/microL during the primary infection versus a secondary level of 9,196/microL and the geometric mean daily parasite count decreased from 847/microL/day to 335/microL/day. Reductions in fever episodes > or =101 degrees F and > or = 104 degrees F appeared to be a more sensitive measure of clinical immunity. Fever episodes > or =104 degrees F in patients with homologous strain reinfections decreased from 1.92 episodes per week to 0.18 compared with 1.24 to 0.57 in patients with heterologous infections. Fever episodes > or =101 degrees F decreased from 2.98 to 0.60 in the homologous strain compared with 2.08 to 1.07 for the heterologous infections. The average maximum fever temperature in the homologous group was 106 degrees F during the primary infection versus 103.4 degrees F for the secondary infection compared with 105.8 degrees F during the primary infections versus 105.6 degrees F for the secondary infection in the heterologous patients.

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