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RASSEGNE - Reviews

Volume:

Biochimica Clinica 2018; 42(3) 191-209

Pubblicato on-line:

Luglio 18, 2018

DOI:

10.19186/BC_2018.040

Scarica in PDF:
Autenticazione richiesta

La diagnosi di malaria: ruolo dell’esame emocromocitometrico nello screening

AUTORI

Roberta Rolla1, Giorgio Da Rin2, Valentino Granero3, Francesco Dima4, Alessandra Fanelli5, Sara Francione6, Claudio Ortolani7, Silvia Pipitone8, Sabrina Buoro9 a nome del Gruppo di Studio di Diagnostica Ematologica Integrata
1Laboratorio di Biochimica Clinica, Azienda Opedaliero Universitaria “Maggiore della Carità” di Novara
2Medicina di Laboratorio, Ospedale di Bassano del Grappa (VI), ASL 7 Pedemontana
3Laboratorio Analisi Unificato Rivoli-Pinerolo ASL TO3, Pinerolo (TO)
4Laboratorio Analisi, Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria Integrata di Verona
5Laboratorio Generale, Università-Ospedale Careggi, Firenze
6Laboratorio Analisi, ASL NO, Borgomanero (NO)
7Dipartimento di Scienze Biomolecolari, Università di Urbino
8Diagnostica Ematochimica, Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria di Parma
9Laboratorio di Chimica Clinica, Ospedale Papa Giovanni XXIII, Bergamo

ABSTRACT

The diagnosis of malaria: the role of the haematology analyzers as first level screening

The diagnosis of malaria: the role of the haematology analyzers as first level screening. Malaria is one of the three most common infectious diseases worldwide, and is caused mainly by four species of Plasmodium: P. falciparum, P. vivax, P. malariae and P. ovale. The disease is endemic in developing countries but it is also gradually involving Western Countries like Italy. Albeit in 1970 the World Health Organization has included Italy among the malaria-free countries, malaria has become the most frequently imported tropical disease. Microscopic examination of the peripheral blood smear is the gold standard for diagnosing malaria. Although this test is quick, cheap and readily applicable, it has also some drawbacks such as low sensitivity and the need of qualified personnel. Therefore, an effective screening test for detecting malaria in cases with low clinical suspicion or characterized by non-specific symptoms is increasingly necessary, especially in Countries where the disease is not endemic. A new generation of hematological analyzers, whose performance may be potentially useful for the screening of subjects with suspected malaria infection has made available. Many fully-automated hematological analyzers, using different techniques (optical-cytochemical, optical fluorescence, multiangle polarized dispersion and volume-conductance-scatter), can now identify the presence of the malarial parasites in peripheral blood, producing specific cell distributions. The blood count can hence be regarded as a new diagnostic opportunity in malaria infection, since it is one of the basic investigations performed in febrile patients, and is also a simple and fast test, that can be performed in virtually all clinical laboratories.

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