Seroprevalence study of dengue-malaria coinfection in an East-Cameroonian public hospital: A comparison between malarial and non-malarial groups

Author:

Ndeme Elodie Ayangma1,Tietcheu Borris Rosnay Galani2,Demanou Sylvie Agokeng3,Djamen Dieudonne Pascal Chuisseu4,Yanou Nicolas Njintang2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Life Science, Higher Teacher’s Training College-Bertoua, University of Bertoua, Cameroon

2. Laboratory of Applied Biochemistry, Department of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Science, University of Ngaoundere, Ngaoundere, Cameroon

3. Laboratory Service, Bertoua Regional Hospital, Bertoua, Cameroon

4. Department of Medicine, Medical and Biomedical Sciences, Higher Institute of Health Sciences, Université Des Montagnes, Bangangte, Cameroon

Abstract

Backgrounds & objectives: Recent research in Cameroon reported several occurrences of dengue in urban settings, but concurrent dengue-malaria infection has received less attention, particularly in the East region. Methods: A two-month cross-sectional and comparative research was performed at Bertoua Regional Hospital which included 50 malaria-positive participants and 90 non-malaria subjects. Participants were selected and provided with a questionnaire to collect sociodemographic data. Blood samples were collected and tested for dengue infection and hematological parameters were assessed. Results: Dengue fever was found in 14% of malarial patients vs 66.66% of controls. Secondary dengue infection was more prevalent in malarial patients than in non-malarial patients. Gender, age, and place of residence were positively correlated to dengue seropositivity. Platelets were substantially lower (P<0.001) in the malarial group than in the non-malarial group. Interpretation & conclusion: In the study, coinfected patients were found to be more vulnerable to dengue, emphasizing the importance of epidemiological surveillance.

Publisher

Medknow

Reference14 articles.

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