Article Details

Comparative Study of Inflammatory Cytokine Levels and Thrombocytopenia during Plasmodium Falciparum and P. Vivax Infections | Original Article

Parveen Kumar Rai*, in Journal of Advances and Scholarly Researches in Allied Education | Multidisciplinary Academic Research

ABSTRACT:

The most commonly observed complication of malaria infections is trombocytopenia. The point of this study was to understand the possible relationship between P. vivax, P. falciparum’s notorious cytokines and blended infections across various degrees of thrombocytopenia. A hospital-based cross-sectional study was performed in India. In this study, blood samples from 627 patients with Maalria fever were examined for contaminated parasite species, clinical conditions, platelet levels and key cytokines produced in response to disease samples from 176 uninfected solid people were utilized as controls. Approximately 62.7 of patients had gentle to direct levels of thrombocytopenia and 16 had serious thrombocytopenia (platelets<50?? 103μl). In general, the consequences of our study propose that infammatory cytokines impact the change of mellow types of thrombocytopenia into extreme structures during malarial infections. Further investigations are expected to understand the relationship of infammatory cytokine responses with extreme intestinal sickness complications and thrombocytopenia.