Prevalence, risk factors, and antimalarial resistance patterns of falciparum plasmodiasis among pregnant women in Kaduna metropolis, Nigeria

Pregnant women infected with malaria represent a significant obstetric problem, especially in the face of antimalarial resistance. This cross-sectional study investigated the prevalence of malaria parasitemia, associated risk factors as well as the antimalarial resistance pattern of isolates from pr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ci ji yi xue za zhi 2017-04, Vol.29 (2), p.98-103
Hauptverfasser: Aliyu, Maryam Muhammad, Nasir, Idris Abdullahi, Umar, Yahaya Abdullahi, Vanstawa, Anthony Philip, Medugu, Jessy Thomas, Emeribe, Anthony Uchenna, Amadu, Dele Ohinoyi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Pregnant women infected with malaria represent a significant obstetric problem, especially in the face of antimalarial resistance. This cross-sectional study investigated the prevalence of malaria parasitemia, associated risk factors as well as the antimalarial resistance pattern of isolates from pregnant women attending four selected secondary health facilities in Kaduna State, Nigeria. Blood samples were collected from 353 pregnant women attending selected hospitals. Malaria microscopy and parasite density count were conducted based on standard protocols. Antimalarial susceptibility test (using chloroquine, artesunate, artether, and sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine), and hemoglobin concentrations were determined using schizont maturation assay and methemoglobin method, respectively. Multiple-drug resistance (MDR) was defined by resistance against ≥3 antimalarial drugs. The overall prevalence of plasmodiasis was 22.4%. Out of those infected, 5.2% was found to be anemic. Malaria parasitemia was significantly associated with parity, residential area, age of women, and use of preventive measures against malaria ( < 0.05) but not with hemoglobin concentration, occupation, and trimester of pregnancy ( > 0.05). Malaria parasites from the pregnant women exhibited the highest resistance against chloroquine, 75 (94.9%) followed Artemether, 30 (37.9%) then sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine, 29 (36.7%) and least resistant to artesunate, 28 (35.4%). The prevalence of MDR was 40.5% (32/79). The prevalence of malaria was relatively high due to inadequate and/or ineffective preventive measures adopted by pregnant women. More so, significant isolates of exhibited MDR against antimalarial agents tested.
ISSN:2223-8956
1016-3190
2223-8956
DOI:10.4103/tcmj.tcmj_22_17