School of Medicine and Pharmacology, University of Western Australia, Fremantle Hospital, PO Box 480, Fremantle 6959, Western Australia, Australia.
Malar J. 2012 Apr 3;11:107. doi: 10.1186/1475-2875-11-107.
Microvascular sequestration of Plasmodium falciparum underlies cerebral malaria. Despite suggestive ex vivo evidence, this phenomenon has not been convincingly demonstrated in coma complicating Plasmodium vivax malaria. Severely-ill Papua New Guinean children with mixed P. falciparum/P. vivax infections are more likely to develop cerebral malaria and die than those with P. falciparum alone, possibly reflecting P. vivax sequestration. Nested PCR was performed on post mortem brain tissue from three such children dying from cerebral malaria due to mixed-species infections. No P. vivax DNA was detected. These findings do not support the hypothesis that P. vivax sequestration occurs in human brain.
疟原虫微血管隔离是引起恶性疟疾的基础。尽管有体外证据提示,但在并发昏迷的间日疟疟疾中,尚未令人信服地证实这一现象。患有混合感染的严重巴布亚新几内亚儿童,与单纯感染恶性疟原虫的儿童相比,更易发生脑型疟疾和死亡,这可能反映了间日疟原虫的隔离。对因混合感染而死于脑型疟疾的 3 名儿童的死后脑组织进行巢式 PCR。未检测到间日疟原虫 DNA。这些结果不支持间日疟原虫在人脑内隔离的假说。