Plasmodium falciparum: sensitivity to chloroquine in wiwo in three ecological zones in Ghana
Date
1992
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Abstract
4690 children aged 6-15 years in 5 urban and 4 rural communities in 3 ecological zones in Ghana were
screened from June 1988 to December 1990 to provide suitable candidates for the World Health Organization standard in vivo test for susceptibility of Plasmodium falciparum to chloroquine. 1880 (40.1%) had parasitaemia, mostly (83.7-98.6%) due to P. falciparum infection. Of the 626 in vivo tests performed, 570
(91.1%) showed sensitivity to chloroquine and 56 (8.9%) responses were classified as resistant to chloroquine at RI (5.1%) and RI1 (3.8%). The resistance responses were commonest (17.1-22.7%) in the coastal
zone, followed by the savanna zone (8.6lO.O%), and lowest in the forest zone (3.1-6.3%). The RI1 responses occurred mainly in communities in the coastal zone. There was no RI11 resistance in any zone. The
pattern of RI (early) and RI1 responses of I’. falciparum to chloroquine in this study suggested an increase in
sensitivity, or a reduction in resistance, of P. falciparum to chloroquine from the coast to the forest and
northern savanna zones, and from the urban to the rural communities in each zone in Ghana.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
children, Ghana, ecological zones, Plasmodium falciparum