A Safe and Effective Consecutive-Infusion Regimen for Rapid Quinine Loading in Severe Falciparum Malaria

Abstract
Recommended initial treatment of severe chloroquine-resistant falciparum malaria consists of a 4-h loading infusion of 20 mg of quinine dihydrochloride (salt)/kg of body weight. To achieve and maintain therapeutic blood quinine concentrations (10 mg/l)safely and rapidly, a consecutive-infusion regimen (7 mg of salt/kg of body weight over 30 min followed by 10 mg of salt/kg of body weight over 4 h) based on pharmacokinetic parameters in cerebral malaria has been suggested. This regimen was evaluated in 16 adults (6 male, 10 female; mean age, 25.9 years) with severe falciparum malaria. Plasma quinine concentrations (mean .+-. SE) were 8.7 .+-. 1.2 mg/l at 30 min and 11.0 .+-. 1.8 mg/l at 4.5 h. There was no electrocardiographic evidence of serious cardiotoxicity during the 4.5-h infusion period, and systolic blood pressure fell by > 10 mm Hg in only one patient. Parasite clearance in 13 surviving patients (median count on admission, 438 .times. 103/.mu.l; range, 500-122 .times. 104) took an average of 71 h (range, 9-115). This regimen is safe, effective, and suitable for use in an intensive care unit.

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