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本文报告了97例疟疾患者并发丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)感染的原因,发现疟疾患者抗-HCV阳性率为71.13%,其中有单采血浆还输血细胞(下称单采浆)献血史者为89.71%,有受血史者为64.29%,既无单采浆史又无受血史者无1例抗-HCV阳性。有单采浆史的疟疾患者与同村非疟疾的单采浆献血者相比.抗-HCV阳性率无显著不同。在无单采浆史和受血史人群中,疟疾病例和非病例抗-HCV阳性率很低.说明有单采浆史的疟疾病例HCV感染与单采浆有关,有受血史的疟疾病例HCV感染与受血有关。对当地村单采浆血站进行调查,发现在采血、分高血浆和血细胞还输过程中存在血液交叉污染,这是导致有单采浆史的疟疾病例HCV感染的主要原因。
This paper reports the causes of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection in 97 malaria patients and found that the positive rate of anti-HCV in malaria patients was 71.13%, among which there was blood donation history Who was 89.71%, who had a history of blood 64.29%, there is no history of single plasma no history of blood without 1 case of anti-HCV positive. Malaria patients with a single plasma pasture were compared with non-malaria plasma recipients in the same village. There was no significant difference in anti-HCV positive rate. Malaria cases and non-case-positive anti-HCV positive rates were very low in those with no history of plasma collection and blood donation. This shows that a single plasmodium-resistant case of malaria was associated with apheresis in HCV infection. Malaria cases with blood-borne history of HCV infection were associated with blood transfusions. A survey was conducted on local single plasma clotting stations and found that there was cross-contamination of blood during blood collection, sub-high plasma and red blood cell transfusion, which was the main cause of HCV infection in malaria cases that had a history of single plasmapheresis.