ABSTRACT
Parasitized red blood cells (PRBCs) were sequestered in microvessels of cerebral and subcutaneous tissues of a rhesus monkey infected with Plasmodium coatneyi. A similar sequestration rate (approximately 80%) was observed in both cerebral and subcutaneous microvessels. Electron microscopy showed knobs of the sequestrated PRBCs cytoadhered to endothelial cells. These results are consistent with the finding of PRBC sequestration in subcutaneous tissues in a comatose patient with cerebral malaria. Biopsy specimens of subcutaneous tissue may be useful as indicators of PRBC sequestration in the brain of cerebral malaria patients.
Subject(s)
Brain/parasitology , Erythrocytes/parasitology , Malaria, Cerebral/parasitology , Plasmodium/physiology , Skin/parasitology , Animals , Brain/blood supply , Macaca mulatta , Microcirculation/parasitology , Skin/blood supplyABSTRACT
Sequestered parasitized erythrocytes were found in microvessels of subcutaneous tissues in a comatose patient with cerebral malaria even though the blood smears were negative after quinine treatment. This situation reflects the continued presence of sequestered parasites in the brain and suggests that negative parasitemia in peripheral blood does not necessarily mean the end point of malarial treatment has been reached. Our findings suggest that biopsy of subcutaneous tissue from severe malaria patients may be useful for determining the severity and prognosis of malaria patients.