Emergency: 9010550550
24/7 Service

Beat Malaria Fast — Test, Treat, and Monitor Safely

Pf/Pv rapid tests, smear confirmation, and artesunate/ACT protocols

Book Malaria Consultation
90 mins
Rapid Test → First Dose
Typical window from triage to starting therapy
24 hrs
Smear Confirmation
Thick/thin smear with parasitemia report
96%
Uncomplicated Recovery
OPD cases recover with targeted therapy and follow-up

When to Consult

  • High fever with chills/rigors, sweating, and severe fatigue
  • Headache, muscle aches, or vomiting with recent travel/outdoor exposure
  • Dark urine, jaundice, or confusion (possible severe malaria)
  • Low urine output, shortness of breath, or persistent vomiting
  • Fever not improving after 48–72 hours of home treatment
  • Elderly, pregnancy, diabetes, kidney/heart disease with fever

Understanding Malaria in the Indian Context

Hyderabad and Telangana see malaria spikes around the monsoon. Early Pf/Pv rapid testing and peripheral smear confirmation help start the right antimalarial quickly and avoid complications like anaemia, jaundice, and organ stress.

When to Consult Our Malaria Specialists

⚠️ Seek urgent care for:

  • ✓ Confusion, severe weakness, or repeated vomiting
  • ✓ Very low urine, breathlessness, or jaundice
  • ✓ Persistent high fever despite medicines

Book a routine visit if fever persists beyond 2–3 days or after travel/outdoor exposure, especially during monsoon months.

Our Diagnostic Approach

Triage & Severity

Decide OPD vs admission/ICU and begin supportive care.

Rapid Antigen Test (Pf/Pv)

Start targeted therapy while awaiting smear.

Peripheral Smear

Confirm species and quantify parasitemia; repeat for non-responders.

Baseline Labs & Differentials

CBC/platelets, LFT/renal, glucose; rule out dengue/typhoid/viral fevers.

Treatment Pathways

From hydration and paracetamol to ACT, IV artesunate for severe malaria, anaemia/platelet support, pregnancy-safe care, and tele follow-ups, we tailor therapy to your risk and severity.

What to Expect: Your Care Journey

Day 0: test + first dose → 24–48 hrs: fever settles → Day 3–5: smear clear and energy returns → Week 1–2: labs normalise → Month 1–3: relapse prevention and wellness check.

Technology & Innovation

RDT + smear results feed into EMR dashboards for timely dose adjustments, discharge safety checks, and follow-up reminders.

Preventing Complications

Mosquito control, early testing, and full-course medication reduce severe disease, anaemia, and readmissions.

Why Ajuda for Malaria Care?

⏱️ Fast Testing

RDT at triage; smear within 24 hours.

🎯 Targeted Therapy

WHO-aligned ACT/IV artesunate protocols.

📱 Guided Follow-ups

WhatsApp check-ins at 24–48–72 hours.

Take the First Step

Call 9010550550 or book online for a same-day malaria evaluation and treatment plan.

Diagnosis Approach

1

Triage & Severity Assessment

Vitals, SpO2, hydration, and severe malaria red flags to decide OPD vs admission/ICU.

2

Rapid Antigen Test (Pf/Pv)

Same-visit RDT guides early therapy; isolate mosquito exposure; begin supportive care immediately.

3

Peripheral Smear (Thick/Thin)

Microscopy confirms species and parasitemia; repeat smears for non-responders or severe cases.

4

Baseline Labs & Differentials

CBC/platelets, LFT, renal panel, glucose; differentiate from dengue/typhoid/viral fevers per season.

Treatment Options

Supportive Care & Hydration

ORS/IV fluids, paracetamol for fever, nausea control; glucose checks to avoid hypoglycemia.

Accelerates symptom control and prevents complications
24–72 hours with daily review

ACT for Uncomplicated Malaria

Artemisinin-based combination therapy per species/weight; counselling for full-course adherence.

High parasite clearance and relapse prevention
3 days typical; follow-up smear if indicated

IV Artesunate for Severe Malaria

ICU protocol with artesunate, fluids, electrolytes, transfusion if needed; monitor acidosis and organ function.

Reduces mortality vs older regimens
Admission 48–96 hours, then oral completion

Anaemia & Platelet Pathway

Track Hb/platelets; iron/folate if depleted; manage hemolysis and jaundice; cautious fluids in renal/hepatic stress.

Prevents transfusions and speeds recovery
Weekly labs until stable

Pregnancy-Safe Protocols

Trimester-appropriate antimalarials and fetal monitoring; avoid contraindicated drugs; coordinate with Obstetrics.

Protects mother and baby; lowers complications
Throughout illness and post-recovery review

Tele Follow-ups & Relapse Watch

WhatsApp check-ins at 24–48–72 hours; return if fever persists or new red flags; vector-control advice.

Cuts bounce-backs by ~25–30%
First week intensive; then as needed

Expected Outcomes

Treatment Timeline

24–48 Hours

Fever curve declines; appetite and energy improve

3–5 Days

Parasitemia clears in uncomplicated cases

1–2 Weeks

Strength returns; labs normalise

1–3 Months

Relapse surveillance and anaemia correction complete

Success Metrics

  • Time-to-first-dose within 90 minutes for suspected malaria
  • Clinical stability achieved within 48–72 hours (uncomplicated)
  • Zero ICU escalation for properly triaged OPD cases