Suppr超能文献

疟疾监测——美国,2001年

Malaria surveillance--United States, 2001.

作者信息

Filler Scott, Causer Louise M, Newman Robert D, Barber Ann M, Roberts Jacquelin M, MacArthur John, Parise Monica E, Steketee Richard W

机构信息

Epidemic Intelligence Service, Epidemiology Program Office, Division of Parasitic Diseases, National Center for Infectious Diseases, CDC, USA.

出版信息

MMWR Surveill Summ. 2003 Jul 18;52(5):1-14.

Abstract

PROBLEM/CONDITION: Malaria is caused by any of four species of intraerythrocytic protozoa of the genus Plasmodium (i.e., P. falciparum, P. vivax, P. ovale, or P. malariae). These parasites are transmitted by the bite of an infective female Anopheles sp. mosquito. The majority of malaria infections in the United States occur among persons who have traveled to areas with ongoing transmission. In the United States, cases can occur through exposure to infected blood products, by congenital transmission, or by local mosquitoborne transmission. Malaria surveillance is conducted to identify episodes of local transmission and to guide prevention recommendations for travelers.

PERIOD COVERED

This report covers cases with onset of illness in 2001.

DESCRIPTION OF SYSTEM

Malaria cases confirmed by blood film are reported to local and state health departments by health-care providers or laboratory staff. Case investigations are conducted by local and state health departments, and reports are transmitted to CDC through the National Malaria Surveillance System (NMSS). Data from NMSS serve as the basis for this report.

RESULTS

CDC received reports of 1,383 cases of malaria with an onset of symptoms in 2001 among persons in the United States or one of its territories. This number represents a decrease of 1.4% from the 1,402 cases reported for 2000. P. falciparum, P. vivax, P. malariae, and P. ovale were identified in 50.1%, 27.8%, 4.5%, and 3.6% of cases, respectively. Fourteen patients (1.0% of total) were infected by >/=2 species. The infecting species was unreported or undetermined in 179 (12.9%) cases. Compared with 2000, the number of reported malaria cases acquired in Africa increased by 13.2% (n = 886), whereas the number of cases acquired in Asia (n = 163) and the Americas (n = 240) decreased by 31.5% and 11.4%, respectively. Of 891 U.S. civilians who acquired malaria abroad, 180 (20.2%) reported that they had followed a chemoprophylactic drug regimen recommended by CDC for the area to which they had traveled. Two patients became infected in the United States, one through congenital transmission and one whose infection cannot be linked epidemiologically to secondary cases. Eleven deaths were attributed to malaria, 10 caused by P. falciparum and one caused by P. ovale.

INTERPRETATION

The 1.4% decrease in malaria cases in 2001, compared with 2000, resulted primarily from a decrease in cases acquired in Asia and the Americas, but this decrease was offset by an increase in the number of cases acquired in Africa. This decrease probably represents year-to-year variation in malaria cases, but also could have resulted from local changes in disease transmission, decreased travel to malaria-endemic regions, fluctuation in reporting to state and local health departments, or an increased use of effective antimalarial chemoprophylaxis. In the majority of reported cases, U.S. civilians who acquired infection abroad were not on an appropriate chemoprophylaxis regimen for the country in which they acquired malaria.

PUBLIC HEALTH ACTIONS

Additional information was obtained concerning the 11 fatal cases and the two infections acquired in the United States. Persons traveling to a malarious area should take one of the recommended chemoprophylaxis regimens appropriate for the region of travel, and travelers should use personal protection measures to prevent mosquito bites. Any person who has been to a malarious area and who subsequently develops a fever or influenza-like symptoms should seek medical care immediately and report their travel history to the clinician; investigation should include a blood-film test for malaria. Malaria infections can be fatal if not diagnosed and treated promptly. Recommendations concerning malaria prevention can be obtained from CDC by calling the Malaria Hotline at 770-488-7788 or by accessing CDC's Internet site at http://www.cdc.gov/travel.

摘要

问题/状况:疟疾由疟原虫属的四种红细胞内原虫中的任何一种引起(即恶性疟原虫、间日疟原虫、卵形疟原虫或三日疟原虫)。这些寄生虫通过感染性雌性按蚊叮咬传播。美国的大多数疟疾感染发生在前往有持续传播地区旅行的人群中。在美国,病例可通过接触受感染的血液制品、先天性传播或本地蚊媒传播而发生。开展疟疾监测以识别本地传播病例,并为旅行者的预防建议提供指导。

涵盖时间段

本报告涵盖2001年发病的病例。

系统描述

通过血涂片确诊的疟疾病例由医疗保健提供者或实验室工作人员报告给地方和州卫生部门。病例调查由地方和州卫生部门进行,报告通过国家疟疾监测系统(NMSS)传输给疾病预防控制中心(CDC)。来自NMSS的数据是本报告的基础。

结果

CDC收到关于2001年在美国或其某一领土上出现症状的1383例疟疾病例的报告。这一数字比2000年报告的1402例减少了1.4%。分别在50.1%、27.8%、4.5%和3.6%的病例中鉴定出恶性疟原虫、间日疟原虫、三日疟原虫和卵形疟原虫。14名患者(占总数的1.0%)感染了两种或更多种疟原虫。179例(12.9%)病例的感染种类未报告或未确定。与2000年相比,在非洲感染的报告疟疾病例数增加了13.2%(n = 886),而在亚洲(n = 163)和美洲(n = 240)感染的病例数分别减少了31.5%和11.4%。在891名在国外感染疟疾的美国平民中,180人(20.2%)报告他们遵循了CDC针对其旅行地区推荐的化学预防药物方案。两名患者在美国感染,一名通过先天性传播,另一名患者的感染在流行病学上无法与二代病例联系起来。11例死亡归因于疟疾,10例由恶性疟原虫引起,1例由卵形疟原虫引起。

解读

与2000年相比,2001年疟疾病例减少了1.4%,主要是由于在亚洲和美洲感染的病例减少,但这一下降被在非洲感染的病例数增加所抵消。这种减少可能代表疟疾病例的逐年变化,但也可能是由于疾病传播的局部变化、前往疟疾流行地区的旅行减少、向州和地方卫生部门报告的波动或有效抗疟化学预防药物使用增加所致。在大多数报告病例中,在国外感染的美国平民未遵循针对其感染疟疾国家的适当化学预防方案。

公共卫生行动

获取了关于11例致命病例和在美国感染的两例病例的更多信息。前往疟疾流行地区的人员应采用针对旅行地区推荐的化学预防方案之一,旅行者应采取个人防护措施防止蚊虫叮咬。任何去过疟疾流行地区且随后出现发热或流感样症状的人应立即就医,并向临床医生报告其旅行史;调查应包括疟疾病血涂片检测。如果不及时诊断和治疗,疟疾感染可能致命。可通过拨打疟疾热线7�70-488-7788或访问CDC网站http://www.cdc.gov/travel从CDC获取关于疟疾预防方面的建议。

文献检索

告别复杂PubMed语法,用中文像聊天一样搜索,搜遍4000万医学文献。AI智能推荐,让科研检索更轻松。

立即免费搜索

文件翻译

保留排版,准确专业,支持PDF/Word/PPT等文件格式,支持 12+语言互译。

免费翻译文档

深度研究

AI帮你快速写综述,25分钟生成高质量综述,智能提取关键信息,辅助科研写作。

立即免费体验