Determination of Plasmodial Species Prevalence among Patients Received at Cotonou Boni Clinic during Rainy Season in the Year 2022
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Abstract
Aims: Malaria is a life-threatening disease caused by parasites transmitted by bites from infected
female anopheles. It is a preventable and treatable illness. It remains a recurring disease among
public health diseases that exposes many people to a risk of infection, including children under the
age of 05 in Benin.
Methods: To determine the prevalence of malaria and different plasmodial species at the Dr Pierre
BONI Clinic, we performed venous and capillary samples on 731 patients for the realization of thick
drops and blood smears between June and July 2022.
Results: Three plasmodial species were identified in 228 patients (31%) as malaria of the 731
patients included in the study with 3 species of plasmodium found: Plasmodium falciparum (95.5%),
Plasmodium malariae (2.85%), Plasmodium ovale (1.65%). Mixed or double species was also
recorded in some patients: Plasmodium falciparum+ Plasmodium malariae and Plasmodium
falciparum+ Plasmodium ovale. The majority of patients have the presence of trophozoites at
Plasmodium falciparum, 95.5%. The parasitic density of P. falciparum is higher than that of P.
malariae and that of P. ovale.
Conclusion: Although evaluated during a period of low transmission, malaria remains a real public
health problem. The distribution of the disease is closely related to the presence in the blood of
plasmodial species.
