AJTMH Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
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Am. J. Trop. Med., s1-25(6), 1945, pp. 473-480
Copyright © 1945 by American Journal of Tropical Medicine

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Complement Fixation in Relapsing Plasmodium Vivax Malaria1

Anna Dean Dulaney AND Robert Briggs Watson
From the Divisions of Pathology and Bacteriology, and Preventive Medicine, University of Tennessee College of Medicine and the Health and Safety Department, Tennessee Valley Authority, Memphis

An unusual opportunity for study of complement fixation in relapsing Plasmodium vivax malaria, acquired in Pacific war areas, was afforded us at Kennedy General Hospital. We were able to follow the complement fixation reactions for malaria over a period of 6 months in a group of such patients, and to correlate the findings with coincident blood films and with clinical activity.

These studies, which are described below, show that in relapsing vivax malaria:

Complement fixation is a more sensitive method of detecting persistent infection than is the examination of a coincident thick blood film.

Complement fixation is an expression of infection, and is directly related to existent or recent parasitemia, which may, or may not, have been of sufficient level to produce a clinical attack.

A consistently positive complement fixation for malaria continuing for more than 2 months is highly indicative of eventual relapse.

Received March 1, 1945.
1 The studies on which this paper is based were supported by a grant from the Tennessee Valley Authority through the Division of Preventive Medicine, University of Tennessee College of Medicine.







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Copyright © 1945 by the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.