Blood stage antimalarial efficacy of primaquine in Plasmodium vivax malaria
- PMID: 8133114
- DOI: 10.1093/infdis/169.4.932
Blood stage antimalarial efficacy of primaquine in Plasmodium vivax malaria
Abstract
The blood stage antimalarial efficacy of primaquine (0.25 mg of base/kg of body weight/day over 14 days) and chloroquine (25 mg of base/kg over 3 days) were compared in 85 adult Thai men with acute Plasmodium vivax malaria. Most (75%) had at least one malaria episode previously. Parasite clearance times after primaquine alone (n = 30) were slower than after chloroquine (n = 30) or combined chloroquine-primaquine (n = 25), but all patients had a satisfactory initial therapeutic response. P. vivax malaria recurred in 10 (17%) of 60 patients followed for > or = 2 months and Plasmodium falciparum malaria developed in another 5 (8%) without reexposure to infection. Recurrences occurred < or = 5 weeks after primaquine treatment (n = 4), suggesting recrudescence, whereas recurrences after chloroquine treatment (n = 6) occurred > or = 5 weeks later, suggesting relapse. Vivax malaria responds well initially to either primaquine or chloroquine. The blood stage antimalarial activity of primaquine may mask chloroquine resistance in combined regimens.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources