Am. J. Trop. Med., s1-24(5), 1944, pp. 317-322
Copyright © 1944 by American Journal of Tropical Medicine
Death Due to Estivo-Autumnal Malaria
A Resumé of One Hundred Autopsy Cases, 19251942
B. H. Kean1 AND
John A. Smith2
From the Board of Health Laboratory, Gorgas Hospital, Ancon, Canal Zone
- 1. The records of 100 patients who died of estivo-autumnal malaria and upon whom autopsies were performed at the Board of Health Laboratory, Gorgas Hospital, Ancon, Canal Zone, between 1925 and 1942 were reviewed. One and six-tenths per cent of all autopsies (6,214) performed during that period were on patients who died of estivo-autumnal malaria.
- 2. Deaths occurred in all months, although questionable peaks in MayJune and DecemberJanuary were present.
- 3. Of 39 Panamanians in the series, 34 were children 10 years or younger.
- 4. The duration of symptoms before hospitalization varied from four and one-half hours to twenty-one days. Twenty-three patients had symptoms of not more than one day before hospitalization and yet they died.
- 5. The degree of parasitization of the peripheral blood was not a wholly adequate index of the seriousness of the illness since 12 patients with light infections died within twenty-four hours of admission despite heavy treatment with quinine.
- 6. Some of the classical signs and symptoms of malaria such as chills, headache, vomiting, palpable liver, and spleen were absent in one third to one half of the patients.
- 7. The clinical and pathologic changes which have been described in shock were recorded in one third of the patients upon whom classification of the type of death was possible.
- 8. No correlation between cerebral malaria as noted clinically and cerebral plugging as recorded at autopsy was apparent in our material.
- 9. Two case reports illustrating the occurrence of shock in patients with malaria were presented. Anti-shock measures were believed to have saved the life of one patient.
Received February 10, 1944.
1 Pathologist, Board of Health Laboratory. Captain, M.C. A.U.S.
2 Staff Physician, Gorgas Hospital.
Copyright © 1944 by the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.