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Acute severe pancreatitis in falciparum malaria
Author(s) -
Mrinal Kanti Taye,
Dilip Kumar Saloi,
Bikash Narayan Choudhury
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
medical journal of dr. d y patil university/medical journal of dr. d.y. patil university
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2278-7119
pISSN - 0975-2870
DOI - 10.4103/0975-2870.186061
Subject(s) - medicine , pancreatitis , acute pancreatitis , hyperamylasemia , gastroenterology , metabolic acidosis , leukocytosis , hemodialysis , biology , enzyme , biochemistry , amylase
Though different organs have been involved in falciparum malaria, pancreas has not been a common organ involved so far. Pancreatitis is a rare complication of Plasmodium falciparum malaria. The patient was admitted with low Glasgow Coma Scale and was febrile and in hypotension, and with oral bleeding. Preliminary investigations revealed leukocytosis, severe anemia, low platelet count, abnormal renal function test, deranged liver enzymes with conjugated hyperbilirubinemia, raised international normalized ratio, and hypoalbuminemia. Arterial blood gas showed metabolic acidosis. The raised pancreatic enzymes with radiological evidence of pancreatitis helped establish the diagnosis. Patient's condition improved with antimalarial, blood transfusion, circulatory support, and hemodialysis. The most possible mechanism of pancreatitis in malaria is microvascular occlusion with resultant ischemia, activation of pancreatic enzymes, and injury to pancreas due to autodigestion. Prognosis was good in our case of malarial pancreatitis

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