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Case #398 - June 2015

A 31-year-old construction worker, who did some contract work in Ghana for nine months, sought medical attention a few days after his return to the U.S. for recurring fever and chills. Although advised to take antimalarial prophylaxis prior to his detail, he admitted that he was not compliant with taking them as prescribed. Smears were made as ordered by the attending physician and stained with a rapid stain routinely used by the laboratory. Figures A and B show what was observed on a thick smear; Figures C-I show what was observed on a thin smear. All images were captured at 1000x magnification with oil. What is your diagnosis? Based on what criteria?

	Case398_A

	Case398_B

	Case398_C

	Case398_D

	Case398_E

	Case398_F

	Case398_G

	Case398_H

	Case398_I

Case Answer

This was a case of malaria caused by Plasmodium malariae. Diagnostic morphologic features shown included:

  • infected red blood cells smaller than uninfected red blood cells (Figures C-I)
  • “birds-eye” ring-form trophozoite (Figure C)
  • band-form trophozoites with coarse pigment (Figure E,F, and G)
  • schizonts with less than 12 merozoites in a rosette arrangement, surrounding a central mass of pigment (Figures B and F); Figure D is an immature schizont.
  • small, round gametocyte with coarse pigment (Figure I)

More on: malaria

Images presented in the monthly case studies are from specimens submitted for diagnosis or archiving. On rare occasions, clinical histories given may be partly fictitious.

DPDx is an education resource designed for health professionals and laboratory scientists. For an overview including prevention and control visit www.cdc.gov/parasites/.

  • Page last reviewed: August 24, 2016
  • Page last updated: August 24, 2016
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