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بسم الله الرحمن الرحیم

بسم الله الرحمن الرحیم . By Shervin Ghaffari Hoseini MD. PhD. Diagnosis of Malaria. Malaria is the world's most important parasitic disease , and kills more people than any other communicable disease except tuberculosis .

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بسم الله الرحمن الرحیم

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  1. بسم الله الرحمن الرحیم

  2. By Shervin Ghaffari Hoseini MD. PhD Diagnosis of Malaria

  3. Malaria is the world's most important parasitic disease, and kills more people than any other communicable disease except tuberculosis. Each year 350-500 million cases of malaria occur worldwide, and over one million people die

  4. Laboratory diagnosis of malaria Microscopic Diagnosis Blood smear Fluorescent Microscopy Quantitative Buffy Coat (QBC ®) Antigen Detection Immunochromatographic Dipstick: RDT Serology IFA ELISA Molecular Diagnosis PCR Real time PCR

  5. Malaria Blood Smear • Remains the gold standard for diagnosis • Blood sample from vein or Puncture from finger pulp • New and clean slide • Both thin and thick films for all patients

  6. Malaria Blood Smear Thick films: • Dry • Do not fix but dehemoglobinate • Stain Thin films: • Dry • Fix • Stain Staining methods: Giemsa stain Leishman's stain Field’s stain

  7. Malaria Blood Smear Thick films: first step: Examination of a thick blood film 20 fold more concentrated species identification difficult minimum of 200 oil immersion fields about 15 minutes for an experienced observer

  8. Malaria Blood Smear Thin films: determine the species entire thin film should be examined about 20-40 minutes for an experienced observer

  9. Interpreting Thick and Thin Films • THICK FILM • lysed RBCs • larger volume • 0.25 μl blood/100 fields • more difficult to diagnose species • good screening test • THIN FILM • fixed RBCs, single layer • smaller volume • 0.005 μl blood/100 fields • good species differentiation • requires more time to read • low density infections can be missed

  10. Calculating Parasite Density - 1 # parasitized RBCs total # of RBCs % parasitemia = X 100 Count the number of parasitized and nonparasitizedRBCs in the same fields on thin smear Count 500-2000 RBCs

  11. Calculating Parasite Density -2 parasites counted WBC counted X WBC count/l parasites/l = Count ≥ 200 WBCs on thick film Assume WBC is 8000/l (or count it)

  12. Estimating Parasite DensityAlternate Method Count the number of asexual parasites per high-power field (HPF) on a thick blood film

  13. Malaria Blood Smear • Prepare smears as soon as possible • Don not fix thick smear • time-honoured peripheral smear study • Identify P. falciparumin a dual infection with P. vivax Mixed infections are not uncommon.

  14. Malaria Blood Smear • negative test DOES NOT rule out malaria • Repeat tests • partial antimalarial treatment • sequestration of parasitised cells in deep vascular beds malarial pigment in circulating neutrophils and monocytes is useful

  15. Malaria Blood Smear Advantages • Distinguishes between species and life cycle stages • Parasitemia is quantifiable • Threshold of detection • thin film: 100 parasites/ 1 μ lit • thick film: 5 -20 parasites/ 1 μ lit • Simple and inexpensive

  16. Malaria Blood Smear Disadvantages labor-intensive equipment, training and supervision needed

  17. Fluorescent Microscopy • Fluorescent dyes detect RNA and DNA that is contained in parasites • Nucleic material not normally in mature RBCs • Stain thin film with acridine orange (AO) • Requires special equipment – fluorescent microscope • Staining itself is cheap • Sensitivities around 90%

  18. Quantitative Buffy Coat (QBC ®)

  19. Quantitative Buffy Coat (QBC ®) Advantages Useful for screening large numbers of samples Quick, saves time Due to larger volume of blood observed, method is more sensitive diagnosis of other diseases such as Babesiosis, Trypanosomiasis and Filariasis is possible

  20. Quantitative Buffy Coat (QBC ®) Disadvantages • Species identification and quantification difficult: thick/thin films on QBC-positive samples is required • High cost of capillaries and equipment • Can’t store capillaries for later reference

  21. An adapted light microscope for the viewing of QBC tubes.

  22. Trophozoites of P. falciparum.

  23. Malaria Antigen Detection • Immunologic assays to detect specific antigens • Commercial kits now available as immunochromatographic rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs), used with blood • P. falciparumhistidine-rich protein 2 (PfHRP-2) • parasite LDH (pLDH)

  24. Mode of action of common malaria RDT format

  25. Malaria Antigen Detection - RDTs * Compared to microscopy, results from multiple studies ** Varies by size of order and vendor

  26. Detection of Plasmodium antigens A: HRP-2 (histidine-rich protein 2) (ICT) B: pLDH (parasite lactate dehydrogenase)(Flow) C: HRP-2 (histidine-rich protein 2) (PATH)

  27. Antigen DetectionMalaria Immunochromatographic Dipstick OptiMAL Assay P. falciparum specific monoclonal antibody Control Plasmodium pan specific monoclonal antibody

  28. Malaria Antigen Detection - RDTs Disadvantages • The use of the RDT does not eliminate the need for malaria microscopy • Cannot detect mixed infections • may not be able to detect infections with lower parasitemia • Cannot detect P. ovale and P. malariae • microscopy is needed to quantify parasitemia

  29. Application of RDTs • Potential uses • Epidemics and emergencies • Inadequate or absent lab services, unskilled staff • Mobile clinics • self-diagnosis by travelers entering endemic areas • outbreak investigation and surveys of parasite prevalence

  30. Para Sight F test

  31. Malaria Serology – antibody detection Methods • IFA • ELISA • Not practical for routine diagnosis of acute malaria because: • Delaied development of antibody • persistence of antibodies • Serology does not detect current infection but rather measures past experience

  32. Malaria Serology • Valuable epidemiologic tool in some settings • Useful for • Identifying infective donor in transfusion-transmitted malaria • Investigating congenital malaria, esp. if mom’s smear is negative • Retrospective confirmation of empirically-treated non-immunes

  33. Indirect fluorescent antibody (IFA) test. The fluorescence indicates that the patient serum being tested contains antibodies that are reacting with the antigen preparation (here, Plasmodium falciparumparasites).

  34. Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) • Molecular technique to identify parasite genetic material • Uses whole blood collected in anticoagulated tube (200 µl) or directly onto filter paper (5 µl)

  35. Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) Advantages • PCR is a reference method. It is at least 10-fold more sensitive than microscopy. • Threshold of detection • 0.1 parasite/µl if whole blood in tube • 2 parasites/µl if using filter paper • more reliable for determining species in a mixed infection. • Can identify mutations – try to correlate to drug resistance • May have use in epidemiologic studies

  36. Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) Disadvantages Parasitemia not quantifiable Requires specialized equipment, reagents, and training

  37. analysis of a PCR diagnostic test for species-specific detection of Plasmodium DNA.  PCR was performed using nested primers

  38. Real-Time PCR • potential to quantify parasitemia, • may detect multiple wavelengths in same tube identifying multiple species in one run • Needs further research and validation for malaria

  39. Real-Time PCR

  40. Quantitative Real-Time PCR

  41. BCSH Guidelines for Quality Control • All malaria films should be examined by two observers • All new batches of Giemsa stain should be tested with a known P. vivax infection • ensure that Schüffner’s dots are stained • parasitised cells are decolourised. • Blood films for this purpose can be sealed in plastic slide boxes and frozen

  42. BCSH Guidelines for Quality Control continue • All laboratories must ensure that new staff are adequately trained and maintain their skills: • Sets of mixed positive and negative thick and thin films should be available for examination • reference laboratories can often provide spare films for training purposes. • High quality photographs of malaria parasites should be available for reference

  43. BCSH Guidelines for Quality Control continue • Websites can be used for on-going training. • www.dpd.cdc.gov/dpdx/HTML/Image_Library.htm (Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, USA) • www.rph.wa.gov.au (Royal Perth Hospital, West Australia, click on malaria information for learn and test yourself site)

  44. Plasmodium falciparum Infected erythrocytes: normal size M I Gametocytes: mature (M)and immature (I) forms (I is rarely seen in peripheral blood) Rings: double chromatin dots; appliqué forms; multiple infections in same red cell Schizonts: 8-24 merozoites (rarely seen in peripheral blood) Trophozoites: compact (rarely seen in peripheral blood)

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