Malaria is a wide-spread disease in tropical areas. The severe form is characterized by organic involvement and/or hyperparasitaemia. Criteria for early monitoring in intensive care rooms are defined; without a timely and early treatment, severe malaria has a 100% mortality. Although the literature in these cases is not extensive, extracorporeal therapy used sequentially for hepatic and renal detoxification is a useful and safe tool that can be used in intensive care. We describe the case of a 36-year-old man with a diagnosis of severe malaria according to WHO criteria. He began treatment with intravenous artesunate and due to a torpid evolution, a sudden increase in bilirubinemia with encephalopathy, parameters of acute kidney injury and acute pulmonary edema, undergoes extracorporeal sequential treatment, coupled with plasma filtration adsorption, high-exchange plasmapheresis, and continuous hemodiafiltration with favorable evolution. This case shows that extracorporeal support in trained hands and in a timely manner is effective when organ failure evolves rapidly to achieve stability and provide necessary time for definitive treatment, in this case rapid action antimalarials until parasitemia becomes negative.
【저자키워드】 Plasmapheresis, extracorporeal therapies, serious malaria.,