Plasmodium knowlesi malaria in the Rhesus monkey.

W L Spangler, D Gribble, C Abildgaard, J Harrison
Author Information

Abstract

Twelve Rhesus monkeys were inoculated intravenously with about 500 000 malaria parasites, Plasmodium knowlesi. Acute hemolysis occurred 5 days later, and all animals died on the 6th or 7th day after inoculation. All organs were gray-green to gray-brown because of deposition of hemoglobin and malaria pigments. This deposition was particularly striking in the lung, brain, abdominal fat and serous surfaces. Microscopic changes indicative of acute hypoxia were found in the liver (centrilobular necrosis) and kidneys (acute tubular necrosis). Terminal intravascular coagulopathy was evidenced by widely distributed, recently formed, fibrin thrombi.

MeSH Term

Animals
Female
Haplorhini
Kidney
Liver
Lung
Macaca
Macaca mulatta
Malaria
Male
Monkey Diseases
Plasmodium

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0malariaRhesusPlasmodiumknowlesidepositionacutenecrosisTwelvemonkeysinoculatedintravenously500000parasitesAcutehemolysisoccurred5dayslateranimalsdied6th7thdayinoculationorgansgray-greengray-brownhemoglobinpigmentsparticularlystrikinglungbrainabdominalfatseroussurfacesMicroscopicchangesindicativehypoxiafoundlivercentrilobularkidneystubularTerminalintravascularcoagulopathyevidencedwidelydistributedrecentlyformedfibrinthrombimonkey

Similar Articles

Cited By