Downloads: 2
India | Paramedical Science | Volume 14 Issue 5, May 2025 | Pages: 1074 - 1077
A Hospital-Based Observational Study on Hematological Alterations in Patients with Malaria Infection
Abstract: This pilot study sheds light on the critical role that hematological analysis can play in the timely diagnosis and management of malaria, especially in resource-constrained, endemic regions. By comparing malaria-infected patients with healthy controls, it is evident that malaria profoundly disrupts several blood parameters, with notable reductions in hemoglobin, hematocrit, and platelet counts, alongside shifts in leukocyte populations. What stands out is the consistent presence of anemia and thrombocytopenia in malaria cases, which, in many ways, can serve as early indicators when other diagnostic tools are unavailable. The observed microcytic, hypochromic anemia and increased red cell distribution width suggest that the disease?s impact on red blood cell morphology is both acute and multifactorial, involving destruction and impaired production. Interestingly, while leukopenia was a common finding, the relative rise in neutrophils and monocytes hints at a complex immune response that warrants deeper exploration. This suggests that, beyond the well-documented fever and chills, malaria leaves a recognizable signature in the blood that, if properly interpreted, could guide quicker, more effective clinical decisions. Although the study's scope is limited by its sample size and lack of species-specific data, it highlights a meaningful starting point for larger investigations that could refine hematological markers as reliable diagnostic and prognostic tools in malaria care.
Keywords: malaria, hematological changes, anemia, thrombocytopenia, diagnosis
How to Cite?: Deepak Kumar, "A Hospital-Based Observational Study on Hematological Alterations in Patients with Malaria Infection", Volume 14 Issue 5, May 2025, International Journal of Science and Research (IJSR), Pages: 1074-1077, https://www.ijsr.net/getabstract.php?paperid=SR25422200449, DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.21275/SR25422200449