Abstract
The gold standard for malaria diagnosis is the microscopic examination of Giemsa stained thick blood smears though microscopy mostly may not detect the presence of Plasmodium species infections in asymptomatic samples. In the reported study, we used two diagnostic methods viz. the conventional microscopic examination and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay to analyse the asymptomatic malaria samples. PCR assay amplifying 18S small-subunit ribosomal RNA (SSU rRNA) gene of Plasmodium in 122 samples confirmed 68% of isolates as asymptomatic P. falciparum infections; with 87.9% mono-infections. We observed that the P. malariae positive samples were not diagnosed in microscopic examination of the blood smears but the PCR based diagnostic method revealed the presence of 12% P. malariae infections in asymptomatic samples from Yaoundé region of Cameroon where no official cases of P. malariae have been reported for over a decade. The sequence analysis further confirmed the presence of 12% P. malariae in malaria positive samples with three base pair deletions and five substitutions in the SSU rRNA gene.
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