N. Singh et al., THE USE OF A DIPSTICK ANTIGEN-CAPTURE ASSAY FOR THE DIAGNOSIS OF PLASMODIUM-FALCIPARUM INFECTION IN A REMOTE FORESTED AREA OF CENTRAL INDIA, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene, 56(2), 1997, pp. 188-191
Citations number
14
Categorie Soggetti
Public, Environmental & Occupation Heath","Tropical Medicine
A study was carried out in a highly malarious forested belt of central
India (Madhya Pradesh) to evaluate the usefulness of a dipstick antig
en-capture assay (ParaSight(R)F) as a diagnostic method for Plasmodium
falciparum appropriate for field use. In all, 1,231 patients with fev
er were screened in parallel with the tailing of thick blood smears. T
he sensitivity and specificity of the dipstick test for detection of P
. falciparum were 93% and 92.5%, respectively. Results also indicate t
hat the dipstick test result became negative within seven days after i
nitiation of curative chemotherapy in the majority of cases (95%). Tri
bal populations in remote forested areas are important reservoirs of P
. falciparum that are mostly resistant to standard antimalarial drugs
and a source of malaria to the rest of the country. Control of malaria
is limited by inaccessibility, lack of medical services, public ignor
ance of the disease, and other technical problems. In this population,
the dipstick assay was found to be highly accurate, simple, and rapid
, suggesting that it may be used in remote forested areas without the
need for microscopic examination. The simplicity of the dipstick test
enabled administration of more effective and expensive antimalarials p
reventing further buildup and dissemination of resistant parasites and
a return of symptoms.