KUMJ | VOL. 4 | NO. 1 | ISSUE 13 | JAN-MAR, 2006

Two cases of severe falciparum malaria in KMCTH
Singh SB, Chaudhary D, Neopane A, Karki DB


Abstract:
Malaria is the most important parasitic disease of man. It is the protozoan infection of RBCs transmitted by bite of blood feeding female anopheline mosquito. Until the 19th century malaria was found throughout Europe, North America and Russia. Since then, it has been eradicated from these areas but in tropics though initial efforts of eradication had been successful, there has been resurgence of disease1 accompanied by increasing resistance of the anopheline vector to insecticide and of the parasite to antimalarial drugs. We report two cases of falciparum malaria in which there was co-existent vivax malarial infection. These two cases were both exposed to highly endemic zone for malaria.

Keyword : Sequestration, malaria, falciparum.