6533b839fe1ef96bd12a6e49
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Fulminantes Lungenödembei Malaria tropica
Hansen TSauer OL. S. WeilemannVon Mach MaEhrenthal Wsubject
Disseminated intravascular coagulationmedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.diagnostic_testPleural effusionbusiness.industryFulminantHepatosplenomegalyGeneral MedicineLung injurymedicine.diseasePulmonary edemaGastroenterologyHeart failureInternal medicineparasitic diseasesmedicinemedicine.symptombusinessChest radiographdescription
HISTORY AND ADMISSION FINDINGS A 54-year-old man was admitted because of intermittent fever for 2 days. Ten days earlier he had returned from Kenya. He had not taken any antimalarial drugs prophylactically. INVESTIGATIONS Initial blood smears showed Plasmodium falciparum in 10.4% of erythrocytes. Laboratory tests indicated hyponatremia and disseminated intravascular coagulation. Also, laboratory markers of infection and hemolysis were clearly positive and accompanied by a low-grade normocyticanaemia. Chest radiograph showed the heart size to be at the upper limit of normal and no signs of congestion, pleural effusion or inflammatory infiltrates. Sonography demonstrated hepatosplenomegaly with diffusely increased echogenicity of the liver. TREATMENT AND COURSE Falciparum malaria [corrected] with quartan fever was diagnosed and treatment with quinine and doxycycline was initiated. Despite the successful elimination of parasites and a negative fluid balance the patient died two days after admission from pulmonary edema and heart failure. CONCLUSIONS A negative fluid balance failed to prevent acute pulmonary edema in this case of severe malaria,supporting the view that fluid imbalance is not an essential feature in malaria-induced lung injury and that cytokines play and important role.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2003-04-01 | DMW - Deutsche Medizinische Wochenschrift |