Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease (Jul 2022)

Co-Infection with <i>Plasmodium vivax</i> and COVID-19 in Thailand

  • Parat Boonyarangka,
  • Kittijarankon Phontham,
  • Sabaithip Sriwichai,
  • Kamonporn Poramathikul,
  • Krit Harncharoenkul,
  • Worachet Kuntawunginn,
  • Napat Maneesrikhum,
  • Sarayouth Srisawath,
  • Chanida Seenuan,
  • Chattakorn Thanyakait,
  • Kanjana Inkabajan,
  • Suda Pludpiem,
  • Kingkan Pidtana,
  • Samandra Demons,
  • Brian Vesely,
  • Mariusz Wojnarski,
  • John S. Griesenbeck,
  • Michele Spring

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed7080145
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 8
p. 145

Abstract

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With the emergence of SARS-CoV-2, healthcare systems not only had to address the pressing clinical needs of the COVID-19 pandemic but anticipate the effect on and of other conditions and diseases. This was of particular concern in areas of the world endemic with malaria, a disease which takes hundreds of thousands of lives each year. This case report from Thailand describes a 25-year-old man diagnosed with Plasmodium vivax, who was then found to be co-infected with COVID-19. Both conditions can have overlapping acute febrile illness symptoms which may delay or complicate diagnoses. He had no prior history of malaria and had received two vaccinations against COVID-19. His clinical course was mild with no pulmonary complications or oxygen requirement, and he responded well to treatments for both conditions. Three months after cure, he again contracted COVID-19 but did not experience any P. vivax relapse. Review of the available literature produced less than 10 publications describing co-infections with P. vivax and COVID-19; nonetheless, in endemic areas, vigilance for both diseases should continue, as co-infections could significantly alter the course of clinical management and prognosis as well as affect the healthcare staff caring for these patients.

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