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1.
Intern Med J ; 52(4): 686-688, 2022 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35419958

ABSTRACT

Blackwater fever is a haemolytic syndrome associated with malaria that coincided with the use of quinine chemoprophylaxis. Once quinine was no longer chronically used to prevent malaria, blackwater fever largely disappeared and its aetiology remains poorly understood. Blackwater fever is representative of classical tropical medicine and its history was reflected in Australia's colonial development of Papua New Guinea particularly as reported in the Australian medical literature.


Subject(s)
Blackwater Fever , Malaria , Tropical Medicine , Australia/epidemiology , Blackwater Fever/diagnosis , Blackwater Fever/drug therapy , Blackwater Fever/epidemiology , Humans , Malaria/complications , Malaria/drug therapy , Malaria/epidemiology , Quinine/therapeutic use
2.
Clin Infect Dis ; 64(7): 939-946, 2017 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28362936

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In the Fluid Expansion as a Supportive Treatment (FEAST) trial, an unexpectedly high proportion of participants from eastern Uganda presented with blackwater fever (BWF). METHODS: We describe the prevalence and outcome of BWF among trial participants and compare the prevalence of 3 malaria-protective red blood cell polymorphisms in BWF cases vs both trial (non-BWF) and population controls. RESULTS: Of 3170 trial participants, 394 (12.4%) had BWF. The majority (318 [81.0%]) presented in eastern Uganda and were the subjects of further analysis. BWF cases typically presented with both clinical jaundice (254/318 [80%]) and severe anemia (hemoglobin level <5 g/dL) (238/310 [77%]). Plasmodium falciparum parasitemia was less frequent than in non-BWF controls, but a higher proportion were positive for P. falciparum histidine rich protein 2 (192/246 [78.0%]) vs 811/1154 [70.3%]; P = .014), suggesting recent antimalarial treatment. Overall, 282 of 318 (88.7%) received transfusions, with 94 of 282 (33.3%) and 9 of 282 (3.4%) receiving 2 or 3 transfusions, respectively. By day 28, 39 of 318 (12.3%) BWF cases and 154 of 1554 (9.9%) non-BWF controls had died (P = .21), and 7 of 255 (3.0%) vs 13/1212 (1%), respectively, had severe anemia (P = .036). We found no association with G6PD deficiency. The prevalence of both the sickle cell trait (10/218 [4.6%]) and homozygous α+thalassemia (8/216 [3.7%]) were significantly lower among cases than among population controls (334/2123 [15.7%] and 141/2114 [6.6%], respectively), providing further support for the role of malaria. CONCLUSIONS: We report the emergence of BWF in eastern Uganda, a condition that, according to local investigators, was rare until the last 7 years. We speculate that this might relate to the introduction of artemisinin-based combination therapies. Further studies investigating this possibility are urgently required.


Subject(s)
Blackwater Fever/diagnosis , Blackwater Fever/epidemiology , Age Factors , Biomarkers , Blackwater Fever/complications , Blackwater Fever/parasitology , Child, Preschool , Erythrocytes/metabolism , Erythrocytes/parasitology , Female , Glucosephosphate Dehydrogenase/genetics , Hemoglobinopathies/complications , Hemoglobinopathies/genetics , Humans , Infant , Male , Mutation , Patient Outcome Assessment , Phenotype , Polymorphism, Genetic , Prevalence , Severity of Illness Index , Symptom Assessment , Uganda/epidemiology , Urinalysis
5.
Saudi J Kidney Dis Transpl ; 25(6): 1352-8, 2014 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25394465

ABSTRACT

Acute renal failure (ARF) is reported in some severe forms of malaria such as black water fever (BWF). It is associated with a high mortality rate and can be managed effectively with adequate renal replacement. A prospective survey of children with dark urine after a malarial infection with Plasmodium falciparum was coupled with a chart review study of patients managed in the past 11 years in the Pediatrics' Kinshasa University Hospital. Eighty-nine cases of ARF were identified, but data from only 63 patients were available, of whom 44 (69.8%) had severe malaria (39 with BWF and 5 with cerebral malaria). The mean age of the patients was 8.2±1.73 years. Of the 39 cases of BWF, an association with quinine ingestion was observed in 32 children (82%). Urea and creatinine levels were elevated in all cases (135.4±88.2 and 3.83±2.81 mg/dL, respectively). Oligo-anuria was observed in 44.4%, severe metabolic acidosis (bicarbonate<15 mEq/L) in 61.5% and hyponatremia (<130 mEq/L) in 33.3%. Peritoneal dialysis was required in 36 patients, including 20 with BWF. The remaining patients were managed with conservative treatment. Twenty-eight children (44.4%), including 20 on dialysis, fully recovered and 14 died (22.2%), including eight cases of BWF. Our study suggests that ARF is commonly associated with BWF in Congolese children. Elevated urea and creatinine and severe metabolic acidosis were observed more often than other clinical/metabolic disturbances. Severe renal impairment remains a significant complication with a high mortality rate in low-resource settings.


Subject(s)
Acute Kidney Injury/parasitology , Blackwater Fever/parasitology , Acidosis/parasitology , Acute Kidney Injury/diagnosis , Acute Kidney Injury/mortality , Acute Kidney Injury/therapy , Adolescent , Age Factors , Biomarkers/blood , Blackwater Fever/complications , Blackwater Fever/diagnosis , Blackwater Fever/mortality , Blackwater Fever/therapy , Child , Child, Preschool , Creatinine/blood , Democratic Republic of the Congo , Female , Health Care Surveys , Hospitals, University , Humans , Male , Peritoneal Dialysis , Prospective Studies , Retrospective Studies , Risk Factors , Treatment Outcome , Urea/blood
6.
Malar J ; 13: 96, 2014 Mar 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24629047

ABSTRACT

The mechanism of massive intravascular haemolysis occurring during the treatment of malaria infection resulting in haemoglobinuria, commonly known as blackwater fever (BWF), remains unknown. BWF is most often seen in those with severe malaria treated with amino-alcohol drugs, including quinine, mefloquine and halofantrine. The potential for drugs containing artemisinins, chloroquine or piperaquine to cause oxidant haemolysis is believed to be much lower, particularly during treatment of uncomplicated malaria. Here is an unusual case of BWF, which developed on day 2 of treatment for uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum infection with dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine (DHA-PIP) with documented evidence of concomitant seropositivity for Chikungunya infection.


Subject(s)
Antimalarials/therapeutic use , Artemisinins/therapeutic use , Blackwater Fever/chemically induced , Blackwater Fever/diagnosis , Quinolines/therapeutic use , Adult , Antimalarials/adverse effects , Blackwater Fever/pathology , Drug Combinations , Humans , Male , Quinolines/adverse effects
9.
Med Mal Infect ; 36(6): 343-5, 2006 Jun.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16806779

ABSTRACT

We report a highly probable case of moderately severe blackwater fever. A French woman, living in Guinea Bissau, was used to taking self-medication halofantrine for malaria. On this occasion, she felt unusual chills and pyrexia after a non documented bout of malaria, followed by nausea, then jaundice with dark-red urines despite another treatment with halofantrine. A sepsis was eliminated by two negatives thick peripheral blood drop examinations. Hemolysis was noted with 8.1 g/dl of hemoglobin, Coombs positive, and LDH at 1,452 IU/l, associated to renal failure with 34 ml per minute of clearance. The outcome was favourable with rehydration. Blackwater fever has been described with the three aminoalcohols, but mainly in severe presentations. Clinicians are not familiar with this disease, even though it has major therapeutic implications: quinine, halofantrine, and mefloquine become strictly contra-indicated. Moderate forms may be unknown, and this observation should be taken into account to prevent mistreatment in future patients.


Subject(s)
Antimalarials/therapeutic use , Blackwater Fever/diagnosis , Acute Kidney Injury , Blackwater Fever/blood , Blackwater Fever/drug therapy , Female , Guinea , Hemolysis , Humans , Middle Aged , Treatment Outcome
10.
Acta méd. costarric ; 47(3): 118-125, jul.-set. 2005. ilus
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-432895

ABSTRACT

La fiebre amarilla es una zoonosis, aguda, febril que se encuentra catalogada como una fiebre hemorrágica potencialmente mortal. Es causada por un antrópodo del cual se conocen dos modalidades epidemiológicas, con un área endémica que corresponde a la mayoría de América del Sur y parte del continente africano. En Costa Rica la última epidemia de fiebre amarilla ocurrió a principios de los años cincuenta. La fisiopatología de la fiebre amarilla no es bien conocida. La mayoría de las infecciones son sintomáticas, y tienen una alta mortalidad que varía según la epidemia. El diagnóstico se confirma de forma definitiva con la serología y aunque éste examen no se realiza en el país, las muestras de los casos sospechosos son enviadas a laboratorios panameños. Con base en su gran mortalidad y a la ausencia de un tratamiento específico, es obvio que el camino a seguir en el manejo de la fiebre amarilla es la prevención mediante las vacunaciones masivas en las áreas endémicas y grupos de riesgo, así como el control del vector. La fiebre amarilla sigue siendo una entidad que afecta considerablemente la salud pública en varios países del mundo; Costa Rica reúne un conjunto de condiciones que facilitarían su aparición y propagación, por lo que es una patología cuyas características convendría mantener en mente. Descriptores: Arbovirus, fiebre amarilla, Costa Rica, zoonosis, fiebre hemorrágica.


Subject(s)
Humans , Blackwater Fever/diagnosis , Blackwater Fever/etiology , Blackwater Fever/prevention & control , Public Health , Vaccination , Yellow Fever , Yellow fever virus , Costa Rica , Diagnosis, Differential , Hepatitis B , Leptospirosis , Malaria , Typhoid Fever
11.
Ann Biol Clin (Paris) ; 61(3): 332-6, 2003.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12805012

ABSTRACT

We report a case of blackwater fever with brown plasma due to the presence of methemalbumin. The discovery of plasma with this color is a rare event at the laboratory. This compound appears during intravascular hemolysis or hemorrhagic pancreatitis when the ability of haptoglobin and hemopexin to bind free hemoglobin has been exceeded. In these cases some of heme is oxidized to hematin and taken up by serum albumin to form an albumin-hematin complex called methemalbumin. The major clinical problem is to evoke the diagnosis of methemalbuminemia and not confuse with methemoglobinemia. In our case, methemalbumin was detected and quantified using a scanning spectrophotometer. Its diagnostic and clinicals consequences are discussed.


Subject(s)
Anemia, Hemolytic/blood , Anemia, Hemolytic/etiology , Blackwater Fever/blood , Blackwater Fever/complications , Methemalbumin/metabolism , Anti-Inflammatory Agents/therapeutic use , Blackwater Fever/diagnosis , Blackwater Fever/therapy , Diagnosis, Differential , Diuretics/therapeutic use , Furosemide/therapeutic use , Hematocrit , Heme/metabolism , Hemoglobins/analysis , Humans , Male , Methemalbumin/analysis , Methemalbumin/chemistry , Middle Aged , Plasma/chemistry , Renal Dialysis , Serum Albumin/metabolism , Spectrophotometry , Steroids , Thrombocytopenia/classification , Thrombocytopenia/etiology
12.
Rev Cubana Med Trop ; 55(1): 50-3, 2003.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15849955

ABSTRACT

The first case of blackwater fever was reported in Cuban medical literature. It is an uncommon complication of paludism due to Plasmodium falciparum, characterized by fever, hemoglobinuria, and kidney failure, with dramatic development and high mortality. The patient came from the People's Republic of Angola, where he stayed 7 years, with history of various episodes of malaria. He was admitted with fever, icterus and thick film test positive for P. falciparum. Treatment with quinine was started, but dark red urine and an increase of icterus were observed 12 hours later. Treatment with quinine was suspended. Red blood cells and platelets were transfused and hemodialysis and plasmapheresis were performed. The patient was discharged 2 weeks later asymptomatic and with negative thick film test. The pathogeny of this disease was discussed, specially kidney failure, making emphasis on the importance of the symptomatic and maintenance treatment in the patient's evolution.


Subject(s)
Blackwater Fever/diagnosis , Cuba , Humans , Male , Middle Aged
13.
Presse Med ; 31(28): 1329-34, 2002 Sep 07.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12355996

ABSTRACT

DEFINITION: Blackwater fever is a clinical entity characterized by acute intravascular hemolysis classically occuring after the re-introduction of quinine in long-term residents in Plasmodium falciparum endemic areas and repeatedly using the product. CLINICAL PROFILE: The symptomatology appears brutally with emission of porto-colored urine, icterus, pallor, nausea, fever and acute renal failure. The hemolytic-like anemia is immediately severe. Parasitemia is mild or absent. The mechanism of renal failure is tubular necrosis. QUININE AND SIMILAR MOLECULES: Well known at the start of the 20th century, blackwater fever has become exceptional since 1950, when quinine was replaced by chloroquine. The disease reappeared in 1990, following the re-utilization of quinine because of resistance to chloroquine. Thereafter, several cases have been described with halofantrine and mefloquine, two new molecules similar to quinine (amino-alcohol family). The physiopathogenesis of the disease is not well known, however it would appear that the concomitance of a double sensitivization of the red blood cells to the P. falciparum red blood cells and to the amino-alcohols is necessary to provoke the hemolysis. EVOLUTION: The severity of the clinical picture often requires initial management in intensive care unit. Nowadays, however, prognosis is good and the disease usually regresses without after effects.


Subject(s)
Blackwater Fever , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Antimalarials/adverse effects , Antimalarials/therapeutic use , Atovaquone , Blackwater Fever/chemically induced , Blackwater Fever/diagnosis , Blackwater Fever/mortality , Blackwater Fever/physiopathology , Blackwater Fever/therapy , Critical Care , Diagnosis, Differential , Drug Combinations , Humans , Mefloquine/adverse effects , Middle Aged , Naphthoquinones/therapeutic use , Phenanthrenes/adverse effects , Prognosis , Proguanil/therapeutic use , Pyrimethamine/therapeutic use , Quinine/adverse effects , Sulfadoxine/therapeutic use
14.
Med Trop (Mars) ; 60(2): 156-8, 2000.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11100442

ABSTRACT

Blackwater fever is characterized by severe intravascular hemolysis with renal failure caused by recurrent use of quinine for prophylaxis. Once described in European patients, sporadic cases have been reported more and more often in autochthonous Africans and Asians. Newer antimalarials including aminoalchohol mefloquine, and halofantrine have also been implicated in Blackwater fever. In this report we describe two cases of blackwater fever involving patients with sickle cell anemia (HbSS). Symptoms including fever, acute hemolytic anemia, emesis, back pain, and hemoglobinuria were characteristic of blackwater fever. Both patients died. Although the underlying mechanism of blackwater fever remains unclear, a likely explanation is an immunoallergic reaction to quinine. Association with glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency has often been reported. Our cases suggest that blackwater fever may also be correlated with hemoglobinopathy such as HbSS.


Subject(s)
Anemia, Sickle Cell/complications , Blackwater Fever/etiology , Adolescent , Adult , Anemia, Hemolytic/parasitology , Antimalarials/adverse effects , Back Pain/parasitology , Blackwater Fever/blood , Blackwater Fever/diagnosis , Blackwater Fever/drug therapy , Fatal Outcome , Fever/parasitology , Hemoglobinuria/parasitology , Humans , Male , Quinine/adverse effects , Vomiting/parasitology
15.
Indian J Pediatr ; 67(2): 161-2, 2000 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10832247
16.
Trop Med Int Health ; 3(8): 632-9, 1998 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9735933

ABSTRACT

Five cases of blackwater fever (BWF) are described, all of whom had a history of recent quinine therapy. In two cases a second haemolytic crisis was induced by halofantrine, in one case also a third. Increasing frequency of this syndrome with its dramatic clinical presentation is to be expected as imported P. falciparum infection, parasite resistance to chloroquine and the use of quinine and other related antimalarials become more frequent.


Subject(s)
Antimalarials/adverse effects , Blackwater Fever/diagnosis , Adult , Aged , Antimalarials/chemistry , Belgium , Blackwater Fever/etiology , Blackwater Fever/prevention & control , Diagnosis, Differential , Female , Humans , Male , Mefloquine/adverse effects , Middle Aged , Phenanthrenes/adverse effects , Quinine/adverse effects , Recurrence
17.
East Afr Med J ; 71(11): 755-7, 1994 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7859663

ABSTRACT

Blackwater fever was an important cause of morbidity and mortality in the beginning of this century particularly in West and Central Africa. There has been a marked reduction in the incidence of blackwater fever since 1950 and only sporadic cases occur nowadays. At the Kenyatta National Hospital, three cases of blackwater fever have been seen in the past four years whereas not a single case had been reported between 1975 and 1988. Two of the patients fit into the classical description of blackwater fever and one was possibly due to drug induced haemolysis in a G6PD deficiency patient.


Subject(s)
Blackwater Fever , Adult , Blackwater Fever/diagnosis , Blackwater Fever/etiology , Blackwater Fever/therapy , Female , Humans , Kenya , Male
20.
Sem Hop ; 55(37-38): 1705-8, 1979.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-230588

ABSTRACT

Four severe cases of imported malaria are reported here. Three of them are pernicious and the fourth is a black water fever (hemoglobinuria). The difficulties of initial diagnosis are exposed. There was no mortality in these four cases which represent the annual recruiting of a multipurpose intensive care unit. But the complications are severe in contradiction with easy effective chemoprophylaxis. The principles of treatment and prophylaxis are resumed in the light of these four observations.


Subject(s)
Blackwater Fever/therapy , Hemoglobinuria/etiology , Malaria/complications , Malaria/therapy , Acute Kidney Injury/etiology , Adult , Africa , Blackwater Fever/diagnosis , Child , Chloroquine/therapeutic use , Critical Care , Female , Humans , Malaria/diagnosis , Male , Middle Aged , Neurologic Manifestations , Paris , Plasmodium falciparum , Pregnancy , Quinine/therapeutic use
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