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Plasmodium ovale malaria acquired in central Spain. (Dispatches).


We describe a case of locally acquired Plasmodium ovale malaria in Spain. The patient was a Spanish woman who had never traveled out of Spain and had no other risk factors for malaria. Because patients with malaria may never have visited endemic areas, occasional transmission of malaria to European hosts is a diagnostic and clinical challenge.

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In the first decades of the 20th century, malaria was a highly endemic disease in Spain. After the civil war (1936-1939), a large epidemic occurred; more than 293,000 cases and 1,278 deaths were reported (1). As a result, public health officials in Spain established strict control measures, and the disease was officially declared eradicated in 1964 (1). Malaria in Spain has been historically transmitted by Anopheles Anopheles: see mosquito.  atroparvus and An. labranchiae. However, in recent entomologic en·to·mol·o·gy  
n.
The scientific study of insects.



ento·mo·log
 surveys conducted in areas that were previously malarious, only An. atroparvus has been found in high densities similar to those observed during the years malaria was endemic (2,3).

Since the eradication of malaria in Europe, locally acquired malaria on the continent has usually been classified as "airport" or "odyssean" malaria (transmitted by infected mosquitoes transported by airplanes, ships, containers, luggage, buses, and the like) (4,5), and cases of malaria reported in Europe without identifiable risk factors have been classified as "cryptic" malaria (6). These cryptic cases may have occurred through local mosquito-borne transmission. In 1997, a case of malaria was diagnosed in a patient from southern Italy and identified as probable malaria transmitted by an autochthonous autochthonous /au·toch·tho·nous/ (aw-tok´thah-nus)
1. originating in the same area in which it is found.

2. denoting a tissue graft to a new site on the same individual.
 mosquito that fed on a gametogenic host; information on this case was shared with public health officials in Europe to reduce the risk of reintroducing malaria into the Mediterranean basin (7).

Because of its close proximity to Africa, Spain is one of the European countries most susceptible to the traffic of sub-Saharan migrant workers and the risk for transmission by mosquitoes migrating from other countries or indigenous anophelines infected by gametogenic hosts has increased substantially. We describe a case of malaria in a European woman who had never traveled out of Spain and had no other risk factors for malaria.

The Study

In March 2001, a 75-year-old woman was admitted to the Hospital Principe de Asturias in Madrid with a history of intermittent fever for 1 week and no obvious infection. Intravenous treatment with ciprofloxacin was prescribed to treat provisionally diagnosed pyelonephritis pyelonephritis: see nephritis.
pyelonephritis

Infection (usually bacterial) and inflammation of kidney tissue and the renal pelvis. Acute pyelonephritis is usually localized and may have no apparent cause.
. While in hospital, the patient had two episodes of high fever (39[degrees]C-40[degrees]C) separated by 48-hour intervals with hypoxemia hypoxemia /hy·pox·emia/ (hi?pok-sem´e-ah) deficient oxygenation of the blood.

hy·pox·e·mi·a
n.
Insufficient oxygenation of arterial blood.
 and deterioration of her general condition. On day 7 of fever, the hematologist he·ma·tol·o·gist
n.
A physician specializing in hematology.


Hematologist
A medical specialist who treats diseases and disorders of the blood and blood-forming organs.
 advised the physician of the presence of rings inside the patient's erythrocytes Erythrocytes
Red blood cells.

Mentioned in: Bartonellosis

erythrocytes (ē·rithˑ·rō·sīts),
n.pl red blood cells.
 (parasitemia parasitemia /par·a·si·te·mia/ (par?ah-si-te´me-ah) the presence of parasites, especially malarial forms, in the blood.

par·a·si·te·mi·a
n.
The presence of parasites in the blood.
 rate <1%). A rapid antigen detection test (HRP2 detection; ICT (1) (Information and Communications Technology) An umbrella term for the information technology field. See IT.

(2) (International Computers and Tabulators) See ICL.

1. (testing) ICT - In Circuit Test.
 Diagnostics, Amrad Corporation, Victor, Australia) was done; the test returned negative results for Plasmodium falciparum and P. vivax vi·vax
n.
1. The protozoan (Plasmodium vivax) that causes the most common form of malaria.

2. Vivax malaria.
. The sample was later identified as P. ovale through microscopy and molecular studies at a reference malaria laboratory. Initial treatment with chloroquine chloroquine /chlo·ro·quine/ (klor´o-kwin) an antiamebic and anti-inflammatory used in the treatment of malaria, giardiasis, extraintestinal amebiasis, lupus erythematosus, and rheumatoid arthritis; used also as the hydrochloride and  followed by primaquine primaquine /prim·a·quine/ (prim´ah-kwen) an 8-aminoquinoline compound used as an antimalarial in the form of the phosphate salt.  eliminated the infection successfully, and the patient recovered fully without complications.

P. ovale was confirmed by semi-nested multiplex polymerase chain reaction polymerase chain reaction (pŏl`ĭmərās') (PCR), laboratory process in which a particular DNA segment from a mixture of DNA chains is rapidly replicated, producing a large, readily analyzed sample of a piece of DNA; the process is  (PCR PCR polymerase chain reaction.

PCR
abbr.
polymerase chain reaction


Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) 
) (8). DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 isolation was carried out with Chelex (9) and the total DNA with the QIAamp DNA Blood Mini Kit (QIAGEN GmbH, Hilden, Germany); the sample was amplified, and a 499-bp fragment compatible with P. ovale was determined. PCR was repeated by using primers at two different temperatures, and the presence of P. ovale fragments was confirmed. The P. ovale fragments, initially embedded in the agarose gel, were then extracted with the help of the column for DNA purification. The rDNA was also amplified by using four specific primers (two forward and two reverse) at two different temperatures to obtain a large quantity of DNA for posterior sequencing. The product of amplification was sequenced in the ABISPRISM 377 XL DNA automatic sequencer See MIDI sequencer.

(music) sequencer - Any system for recording and/or playback of music via a programmable memory which stores music not as audio data, but as some representation of notes.
 (PE Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA). Afterwards, sequences were sent to the GenBank database; in all the cases, 100% homology for the small subunit of the P. ovale rRNA gene was confirmed.

Epidemiologic Study

The patient had never traveled outside of Spain nor had any previous contact with people who had lived in or visited a country with endemic malaria. She had not received any packages from malaria-endemic areas. Because of obesity and instability from normotensive normotensive /nor·mo·ten·sive/ (-ten´siv)
1. characterized by normal tone, tension, or pressure, as by normal blood pressure.

2. a person with normal blood pressure.
 hydrocephalus hydrocephalus (hī'drəsĕf`ələs), also known as water on the brain, developmental (congenital) or acquired condition in which there is an abnormal accumulation of body fluids within the skull. , she had been confined to her home since January 2000, except for two visits to the hospital. She resides in an urban area close to two rivers (<1 km distance) and two international airports (Torrej6n de Ardoz [4 km distance] and Barajas [18 km distance]). The city in which the patient lives (Alcala de Henares Al·ca·lá de He·na·res  

A town of central Spain east-northeast of Madrid. Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra and Catherine of Aragon were born here. Population: 201,000.
) is very close to the Spanish capital, Madrid (30 km), an area with a meso-Mediterranean climate characterized by 400-500 mm of annual rainfall and average temperatures of 6[degrees]C in winter and 22[degrees]C-24[degrees]C in summer. The city's geographic conditions are semiarid semiarid

said of regions of the earth which have dry climates but not as dry as those of arid climates.
 with 3-4 months of dry seasons. Alcala has 180,060 inhabitants, including 12,711 (7%) foreign residents; 1,121 (0.6%) of the residents are Africans from malaria-endemic countries located mostly in the western and central regions of Africa The continent of Africa can be conceptually subdivided into a number of regions or subregions. Directional approach
One common approach categorises Africa directionally, e.g.
.

We investigated the patient's medical history for other risk factors for malaria. The patient's uterus, ovaries, gall bladder gall bladder, small pear-shaped sac that stores and concentrates bile. It is connected to the liver (which produces the bile) by the hepatic duct. When food containing fat reaches the small intestine, the hormone cholecystokinin is produced by cells in the intestinal , and appendix were removed >30 years ago, and she had never received any blood transfusions or blood derivates. Other risk factors such as needle-sharing, malariotherapy, or organ transplants were discarded. The possibility of iatrogenic iatrogenic /iat·ro·gen·ic/ (i-a´tro-jen´ik) resulting from the activity of physicians; said of any adverse condition in a patient resulting from treatment by a physician or surgeon.  transmissions during previous hospital admissions (the last visit was 3 weeks before onset of symptoms) was also investigated and ruled out.

In the city in which the patient resides, the incidence of malaria in 1999 and 2000 was 1.2 and 3.7 cases per 100,000 inhabitants, respectively, but no cases were produced by P. ovale. In contrast, in the region surrounding Madrid, which includes two international airports, the incidence of imported malaria in 1999 and 2000 was, 2.7 and 3.4 cases per 100,000 inhabitants, respectively, (139 and 171 cases in total); P. ovale was the species implicated in 2.1% and 5.3% of these regional cases, respectively. Health care in Spain is free for foreign residents, but they must be inscribed in·scribe  
tr.v. in·scribed, in·scrib·ing, in·scribes
1.
a. To write, print, carve, or engrave (words or letters) on or in a surface.

b. To mark or engrave (a surface) with words or letters.
 in the local census bureau, and many illegal foreign migrant or temporary workers are likely not covered by any health insurance.

Conclusions

This case is the first locally acquired P. ovale infection connected with Europe. The infection may have been transmitted by an odyssean vector. The patient lives 4 and 18 km away from international airports, within the radius of other previously reported airport malaria cases (4,10). The parasite may also have been transmitted by a local mosquito (introduced malaria) (5). In Spain, a possible vector for local infection is An. atroparvus, since this species has shown receptivity to P. vivax (11) and possibly could be receptive to P. ovale as well. Surprisingly, the illness began when cold temperatures prevailed. Thus, the disease could have been a relapse from hepatic hypnozoite or a primoinfection produced by the bite of an inhouse hibernating infected Anopheles spp. female (12). Whatever the mechanism, the diagnosis was complicated by the fact that the disease occurred during the winter.

Spain hosts a growing number of migrant workers from west and central Africa traveling through the Gibraltar Strait. Tourism and international flights to and from tropical countries have multiplied in recent years (13). All these factors can account for occasional or epidemic reintroduction of malaria into the country.

Although some studies indicate that indigenous mosquitoes such as An. labranquiae and An. atroparvus are not susceptible to the afrotropical P. falciparum strains (2,11), these species of anophelines are probably fully susceptible to infection by P. vivax and P. ovale strains imported from Africa. In addition, Asian or American P. falciparum strains may also be imported.

In Europe, malaria transmission can also occur in urban settings given the appropriate conditions. Malaria should be considered in patients with a fever of unknown origin Fever of Unknown Origin Definition

Fever of unknown origin (FUO) refers to the presence of a documented fever for a specified time, for which a cause has not been found after a basic medical evaluation.
, even if they have never traveled to malaria-endemic areas. Increased attention should be given to persons who work or live close to international airports or in areas with high population of new foreign residents from malarious areas. Hospital laboratories should be ready to detect malaria parasitemia on a 24-hour basis (thick films or antigen detection if microscopy expert is unavailable) on a physician's request. Likewise, PCR techniques should be used to detect retrospectively low parasitemias and confirm the species diagnosis. We suggest that epidemiologic and clinical attention should be given to travelers and newly arrived foreign residents from malaria-endemic countries to prevent secondary cases (14). Simple, easy access to health care for recently arrived migrant workers should be implemented to assess risk factors and screen for malaria if necessary.

Acknowledgments

We thank Tomas Jelinek and Gaby Peyerl for their expert technical assistance and all the staff members at the laboratories of Hospital Principe de Asturias and the Laboratorio de Referencia de Malaria of ISCIII for processing the specimens. We also thank Jerry Keller for editing the manuscript.

References

(1.) Blazquez J. [Susceptibility to malaria in Spain]. Rev Sanid Hig Publica (Madr) 1982;56;683-91.

(2.) Blazquez J. [Entomologic investigation on anophelism in the Ebro River delta]. Rev Sanid Hig Publica (Madr) 1974;48:363-77.

(3.) Eritja R, Aranda C, Padros J, Goula M. Revised checklist of the Spanish mosquitoes. Acta Virologica Portuguesa 1998;5:25.

(4.) Isaacson M. Airport malaria: a review. Bull World Health Organ 1989;67:737-43.

(5.) Isaacson M, Frean JA. African malaria vectors in European aircraft. Lancet 2001;357:235.

(6.) Sabitinelli G, Majori G, D'Ancona, Romi R. Malaria epidemiological trends in Italy. Eur J Epidemiol 1994;10:399-403.

(7.) Baldari M, Tamburro A, Sabitinelli G, Romi R, Severini C, Cuccagna G, et al. Malaria in Maremma Maremma (märām`mä), coastal area in Tuscany, central Italy, along the Tyrrhenian Sea and extending E to the Apennines. A flourishing region in Etruscan and early Roman times, it became marshy and was largely abandoned in the Middle Ages , Italy. Lancet 1998;351:1246-7.

(8.) Rubio JM, Benito A, Berzosa P J, Roche J, Puente S, Subirats M, et al. Usefulness of seminested multiplex PCR in surveillance of imported malaria in Spain. J Clin Microbiol 1999;37:3260-4.

(9.) Walsh PS, Metzger DA, Higuchi R. Chelex 100 as a medium for simple extraction of DNA for PCR-based typing from forensic material. Biotechniques 1991;10:506-13.

(10.) Praetorius F, Altrock G, Blees N, Schuh N, Faulde M. [Imported Anopheles: in the luggage or from the airplane? A case of severe autochthonous malaria tropica near an airport]. Dtsch Med Wochenschr 1999;124:9981002.

(11.) Zulueta J, Ramsdale CD, Coluzzi M. Receptivity to malaria in Europe. Bull World Health Organ 1975;52:109-11.

(12.) Service MW. The Anopheles vector. In: Gilles HM, Warrell DA, editors. Bruce-Chwatt's essential malariology malariology
Rare. the study of malaria. — malariologist, n.
See also: Disease and Illness
. London: Oxford University Press; 1993. p. 96-123.

(13.) Zubero Z, Santamaria JM, Munoz J, Teira R, Baraia-Etxaburu J, Cistema R. ["Tropical" imported diseases: experience of a specialized unit in a general hospital]. Rev Clin Esp 2000;200:533-7.

(14.) MacArthur JR, Holtz TH, Jenkins J, Newell JP, Koehler JE, Parise ME, et al. Probable locally acquired mosquito-transmitted malaria in Georgia, 1999. Clin Infect Dis 2001;32:E124-8.

Juan Cuadros, * Maria Jose Calvente, ([dagger]) Agustin Benito, ([double dagger]) Juan Arevalo, * Maria Angeles Calero, * Javier Segura, ([double dagger]) and Jose Miguel Rubio ([double dagger])

* Hospital Principe de Asturias, Alcala de Henares, Madrid, Spain; ([dagger]) Consejeria de Sanidad, Comunidad de Madrid, Madrid, Spain; and ([double dagger]) Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid, Spain

Dr. Cuadros is a clinical microbiologist at the Servicio de Microbiologia in the Hospital Principe de Asturias of Alcala de Henares, Madrid, Spain. His main areas of interest include imported infectious diseases and clinical parasitology Parasitology

The scientific study of parasites and of parasitism. Parasitism is a subdivision of symbiosis and is defined as an intimate association between an organism (parasite) and another, larger species of organism (host) upon which the parasite is
.

Address for correspondence: Dr. Juan Cuadros, Servicio de Microbiologia y Parasitologia, Cra. de Meco s/n, Alcala de Henares, 28805 Madrid, Spain; fax: 00 34 1 8801825; e-mail: jcuadros@efd.net
COPYRIGHT 2002 U.S. National Center for Infectious Diseases
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Rubio, Jose Miguel
Publication:Emerging Infectious Diseases
Geographic Code:4EUSP
Date:Dec 1, 2002
Words:1952
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