A Quantitative Analysis of the Microvascular Sequestration of Malaria Parasites in the Human Brain
American Journal Of Pathology 155(2): 395-410
Article 1999 English
Authors
KS
Kamolrat Silamut
NP
Nguyen Hoan Phu
CW
C. W. M. Whitty
Abstract
1 min read
Microvascular sequestration was assessed in the brains of 50 Thai and Vietnamese patients who died from severe malaria (
Plasmodium falciparum
, 49;
P. vivax
, 1). Malaria parasites were sequestered in 46 cases; in 3 intravascular malaria pigment but no parasites were evident; and in the
P. vivax
case there was no sequestration. Cerebrovascular endothelial expression of the putative cytoadherence receptors ICAM-1, VCAM-1, E-selectin, and chondroitin sulfate and also HLA class II was increased. The median (range) ratio of cerebral to peripheral blood parasitemia was 40 (1.8 to 1500). Within the same brain different vessels had discrete but different populations of parasites, indicating that the adhesion characteristics of cerebrovascular endothelium change asynchronously during malaria and also that significant recirculation of parasitized erythrocytes following sequestration is unlikely. The median (range) ratio of schizonts to trophozoites (0.15:1; 0.0 to 11.7) was significantly lower than predicted from the parasite life cycle (
P
< 0.001). Antimalarial treatment arrests development at the trophozoite stages which remain sequestered in the brain. There were significantly more ring form parasites (age < 26 hours) in the cerebral microvasculature (median range: 19%; 0–90%) than expected from free mixing of these cells in the systemic circulation (median range ring parasitemia: 1.8%; 0–36.2%). All developmental stages of
P. falciparum
are sequestered in the brain in severe malaria.
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