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1.
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
2.
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
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