Classification of clinical falciparum malaria and its use for the evaluation of chemosuppression in children under six years of age in Liberia, west Africa

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Classification of clinical falciparum malaria and its use for the evaluation of chemosuppression in children under six years of age in Liberia, west Africa. / Hogh, B; Marbiah, N T; Petersen, E; Dolopaye, E; Willcox, M; Björkman, A; Hanson, A P; Gottschau, A.

In: Acta Tropica, Vol. 54, No. 2, 08.1993, p. 105-15.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hogh, B, Marbiah, NT, Petersen, E, Dolopaye, E, Willcox, M, Björkman, A, Hanson, AP & Gottschau, A 1993, 'Classification of clinical falciparum malaria and its use for the evaluation of chemosuppression in children under six years of age in Liberia, west Africa', Acta Tropica, vol. 54, no. 2, pp. 105-15.

APA

Hogh, B., Marbiah, N. T., Petersen, E., Dolopaye, E., Willcox, M., Björkman, A., Hanson, A. P., & Gottschau, A. (1993). Classification of clinical falciparum malaria and its use for the evaluation of chemosuppression in children under six years of age in Liberia, west Africa. Acta Tropica, 54(2), 105-15.

Vancouver

Hogh B, Marbiah NT, Petersen E, Dolopaye E, Willcox M, Björkman A et al. Classification of clinical falciparum malaria and its use for the evaluation of chemosuppression in children under six years of age in Liberia, west Africa. Acta Tropica. 1993 Aug;54(2):105-15.

Author

Hogh, B ; Marbiah, N T ; Petersen, E ; Dolopaye, E ; Willcox, M ; Björkman, A ; Hanson, A P ; Gottschau, A. / Classification of clinical falciparum malaria and its use for the evaluation of chemosuppression in children under six years of age in Liberia, west Africa. In: Acta Tropica. 1993 ; Vol. 54, No. 2. pp. 105-15.

Bibtex

@article{2afbad0594a84bd49ec980c714dd8f4e,
title = "Classification of clinical falciparum malaria and its use for the evaluation of chemosuppression in children under six years of age in Liberia, west Africa",
abstract = "The possible role of malaria as cause of morbidity was assessed during one year in 262 children aged 6 months to 6 years living in two villages in a rural area of Liberia. The study population was followed by weekly clinics and three-monthly surveys and the children were randomly allocated to receive either chloroquine or placebo every 3 weeks. The morbidity of the children was evaluated by criteria based on the history and the clinical condition into four different stages, in order to describe the probability that an observed clinical event could be attributed to malaria infection, based on the presence of detectable parasites in the blood, the history the previous week, and the clinical status of the child. The level of anaemia, splenomegaly and measured body temperature supported that malaria was the major contributor to the overall morbidity observed. Based on the stage classification of clinical illness, children were classified as having 'possible clinical malaria' or 'probable clinical malaria'. Malaria appeared to be an important cause of febrile episodes during both dry and rainy seasons. During the rainy season more than 60% of the children experienced at least one clinical malaria episode, and during the dry season more than 50% of the children experienced at least one clinical attack of malaria. Children receiving chemosuppression had overall fewer clinical malaria attacks, and the effect of the chemosuppression was most pronounced in the dry season, the odds ratio comparing children receiving regular chemosuppression with children receiving presumptive treatment only was estimated to 0.39 (0.25-0.62).",
keywords = "Anemia/etiology, Body Temperature, Child, Preschool, Chloroquine/therapeutic use, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Infant, Liberia, Malaria, Falciparum/complications, Male, Seasons, Severity of Illness Index, Splenomegaly/etiology",
author = "B Hogh and Marbiah, {N T} and E Petersen and E Dolopaye and M Willcox and A Bj{\"o}rkman and Hanson, {A P} and A Gottschau",
year = "1993",
month = aug,
language = "English",
volume = "54",
pages = "105--15",
journal = "Acta Tropica",
issn = "0001-706X",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Classification of clinical falciparum malaria and its use for the evaluation of chemosuppression in children under six years of age in Liberia, west Africa

AU - Hogh, B

AU - Marbiah, N T

AU - Petersen, E

AU - Dolopaye, E

AU - Willcox, M

AU - Björkman, A

AU - Hanson, A P

AU - Gottschau, A

PY - 1993/8

Y1 - 1993/8

N2 - The possible role of malaria as cause of morbidity was assessed during one year in 262 children aged 6 months to 6 years living in two villages in a rural area of Liberia. The study population was followed by weekly clinics and three-monthly surveys and the children were randomly allocated to receive either chloroquine or placebo every 3 weeks. The morbidity of the children was evaluated by criteria based on the history and the clinical condition into four different stages, in order to describe the probability that an observed clinical event could be attributed to malaria infection, based on the presence of detectable parasites in the blood, the history the previous week, and the clinical status of the child. The level of anaemia, splenomegaly and measured body temperature supported that malaria was the major contributor to the overall morbidity observed. Based on the stage classification of clinical illness, children were classified as having 'possible clinical malaria' or 'probable clinical malaria'. Malaria appeared to be an important cause of febrile episodes during both dry and rainy seasons. During the rainy season more than 60% of the children experienced at least one clinical malaria episode, and during the dry season more than 50% of the children experienced at least one clinical attack of malaria. Children receiving chemosuppression had overall fewer clinical malaria attacks, and the effect of the chemosuppression was most pronounced in the dry season, the odds ratio comparing children receiving regular chemosuppression with children receiving presumptive treatment only was estimated to 0.39 (0.25-0.62).

AB - The possible role of malaria as cause of morbidity was assessed during one year in 262 children aged 6 months to 6 years living in two villages in a rural area of Liberia. The study population was followed by weekly clinics and three-monthly surveys and the children were randomly allocated to receive either chloroquine or placebo every 3 weeks. The morbidity of the children was evaluated by criteria based on the history and the clinical condition into four different stages, in order to describe the probability that an observed clinical event could be attributed to malaria infection, based on the presence of detectable parasites in the blood, the history the previous week, and the clinical status of the child. The level of anaemia, splenomegaly and measured body temperature supported that malaria was the major contributor to the overall morbidity observed. Based on the stage classification of clinical illness, children were classified as having 'possible clinical malaria' or 'probable clinical malaria'. Malaria appeared to be an important cause of febrile episodes during both dry and rainy seasons. During the rainy season more than 60% of the children experienced at least one clinical malaria episode, and during the dry season more than 50% of the children experienced at least one clinical attack of malaria. Children receiving chemosuppression had overall fewer clinical malaria attacks, and the effect of the chemosuppression was most pronounced in the dry season, the odds ratio comparing children receiving regular chemosuppression with children receiving presumptive treatment only was estimated to 0.39 (0.25-0.62).

KW - Anemia/etiology

KW - Body Temperature

KW - Child, Preschool

KW - Chloroquine/therapeutic use

KW - Cohort Studies

KW - Female

KW - Humans

KW - Infant

KW - Liberia

KW - Malaria, Falciparum/complications

KW - Male

KW - Seasons

KW - Severity of Illness Index

KW - Splenomegaly/etiology

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 7902645

VL - 54

SP - 105

EP - 115

JO - Acta Tropica

JF - Acta Tropica

SN - 0001-706X

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 203012482