Spleen and Parasite Rates as Measures of Malaria in the Caribbean Area
H. C. Clark
United Fruit Company Medical Department, New York, N. Y.
1. The parasite rate, employing the thick blood film method,on 11,000 adult Haitian negroes was 23.5 per cent, while thesame test on 1102 of their children showed a rate of 41.9 percent.
2. The spleen rate on these same adults was 3.05 percent andon the same children was 22.78 per cent.
3. Of the2585 adult negroes whose blood films were positivefor the parasitesof malaria, only 110 had palpable spleens.Therefore, 2475 menwith malaria would have been overlookedhad the spleen indexalone been employed. Of the 462 childrenwhose blood films werepositive for malaria, 175 had palpablespleens. Therefore, 287children with malaria would not havebeen considered infectedif we had used only the spleen index.
4. Of the 335 adultnegroes who had palpable spleens, 225 didnot have malarialparasites in their blood films. Of the 251negro children whohad palpable spleens, 76 failed to revealparasites in theirblood films. Two hundred and sixty-four,or 78.7 per cent, ofthe palpable spleens found in the adultnegroes were barelypalpable; while 131, or 52.2 per cent, ofthe palpable spleensin the children were of the same type.It is possible that allthe palpable spleens recorded, eventhough not associated withparasites in the blood films, representedlatent or recent malaria.Nevertheless, the error in the spleenrate was so much greaterthan in the parasite rate that it hasgreat significance forthose of us who wish to treat the activecases of malaria inan adult male labor force, or even in thegeneral inhabitantsof a community. The thick blood film examinationof a largelabor force or community on a single day does not,of course,disclose all of the individuals who may be positivefor malaria.Interval surveys are indicated. The combined applicationofthe blood and the spleen surveys would have greater valueinthe Latin-American labor forces, because the spleens of thisrace seem to show a greater degree and more permanent reactionto malarial infections than the spleens of the West Indian negroesshow. I think, however, that the thick blood film survey, evenin the Latin Americans, will include nearly all of the malarialinfections that are active.
5. The application of both theparasite and spleen survey methodswill fail to detect all casesof malarial infections, as canbe easily proved by the routineexamination at autopsy of filmsprepared from the rib marrowand splenic pulp.
6. Of the 335 palpable spleens found inthese adult negroes,only 71, or 21.2 per cent, were below thecostal margin. Ofthe 251 palpable spleens found in the negrochildren, 120 or47.8 per cent were below the costal margin.The spleens whichextended below the costal margin were notassociated, in anyregular manner, with the group of individualsshowing "heavyparasite" infections in their blood films. Theselarge spleenswere very likely due to malarial chronicity ratherthan to oneor two acute attacks.
7. Extreme cases of splenicenlargement, 1000 grams or morein weight, were commonly foundin the Latin American labor classof the autopsy series; andwere very rarely encountered in thenegro, even though he hadlived for a number of years on themainland under the same environmentas the Latin Americans.
8. Analysis of the autopsy seriesof cases indicates that acuteenlargement of the spleen in negroesis more significant andconstant in typhoid fever and lobarpneumonia than in malariaof the estivo-autumnal type.
9.The approximate range in weight of the normal spleen in thesenegroes is, apparently, 140 to 160 grams. See tables 7, 11 and16.
10. It would appear, from analysis of the clinical recordsassociatedwith the weights of the spleen at autopsy, that inadults thisorgan must exceed 300 grams in size before palpationcan scorea very high rate of success. See table 9.
11. Theseries of lobar pneumonia cases in the negro (table8) revealedspleens with a weight in excess of 300 grams in20 cases; yetin 6 instances, or 30 per cent, these spleenswere not palpable.A disease of this nature may interfere witha low excursionof the diaphragm, which would ordinarily forcethe spleen down;and an inflated stomach and intestine couldfurther handicapefforts in palpation.
12. These series of cases, in the autopsyrecords on cases dyingfrom some of the various causes of externalviolence, indicatethat the approximate normal weight of thespleen in the WestIndian negro is 130 to 150 grams; while intwo groups of 7 and8 cases of the Latin Americans, it was forPanama and Hondurasrespectively 325 and 456 grams. A groupof twelve white peoplefrom the United States gave an averageweight of 122 grams.Two adult Chinese men revealed an averageweight of 80 grams.The body weight and height do not have asmuch relation to thesize of the spleen as one might think.Race seems to play amore important rôle than the sizeof the body. See tables7, 11, 12, 13 and 16. It is not consideredsafe to assume thatthe average spleen weight given here forthe Latin Americanlabor class is their normal spleen weight,even though the casesrecorded were persons who were apparentlyin good health priorto the time that they lost their livesdue to some form of externalviolence. It seems probable thatthere is a more permanent reactionof the spleen to former orlatent diseases in this race thanin the other races mentioned.It may be true that the descendantsof the African race do notrespond to the malarial stimulusto the same degree that thenatives of Central America do. Perhaps,this feature tends toshow that malaria was imported to theCaribbean area duringthe days of slavery.