Journal article

Red cell selectivity in malaria: A study of multiple-infected erythrocytes

JA Simpson, K Silamut, K Chotivanich, S Pukrittayakatnee, NJ White

Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | OXFORD UNIV PRESS | Published : 1999

Abstract

To characterize red cell susceptibility to invasion in malaria, a selectivity index (SI) was calculated as the ratio of observed number of multiple-infected red cells to that expected from a random process (Poisson distribution). In patients with falciparum malaria (n = 100) SI decreased with increasing parasitaemia (P < 0.001), and correlated inversely with plasma lactate concentrations, chosen prospectively as a measure of disease severity (r = -0.36, P < 0.001). For parasitaemias < 5%, the SI was lower in patients with severe malaria (geometric mean 1.35; 95% confidence interval 1.01-1.80) than in uncomplicated malaria (2.31; 1.89-2.81; P = 0.003), despite similar parasite counts. The geo..

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