There is general agreement that humans with active malarial infections 4 develop amenia and hyproproteinemia. The anemia is usually considered to be secondary to erythrocyte destruction by the intracellular parasites, but no adequate explanation has been offered for the hypoproteinemia. Since laboratory techniques commonly used measure only the relative amounts of chemical and cellular components of the blood, it cannot be assumed that these relative measurements always reflect fluctuations in the total amounts of these constituents.In order to determine alterations in the total amounts of circulating plasma proteins and red blood cells, this study of the blood volume changes associated with clinically active, untreated malaria was undertaken. Simultaneous determinations of the plasma proteins, plasma bilirubin, and erythrocyte concentrations were made so that the relative and total amounts of these elements might be calculated and compared.
METHODS AND MATERIALSNine patients with central nervous system syphilis, but otherwise relatively normal, served as experimental subjects. The group consisted of 5 white and 3 negro males and 1 negro female. Four patients were inoculated by the bites of Anopheles quadrimaculatus infected with Plasmodium vivax (McCoy strain), 1 patient by the intravenous administration of trophozoites of P. vivax (McCoy strain), and 4 patients by the intravenous injection of trophozoites of P. falciparum (Costa strain). These data are summarized in Table I.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.