Comparative Analysis of Haematological and Biochemical Profiles in Asymptomatic and Symptomatic Malaria in Relation to Parasite Density

John Awuah Addor

Department of Mathematics, Statistics and Actuarial Science, Takoradi Technical University, Box 256, Takoradi, Ghana.

Govinda Das Yankah *

Department of Mathematics, Statistics and Actuarial Science, Takoradi Technical University, Box 256, Takoradi, Ghana.

Issaka Sulemana

Department of Mathematics, Statistics and Actuarial Science, Takoradi Technical University, Box 256, Takoradi, Ghana.

James Atta Dadson

Department of Industrial Laboratory Sciences, Takoradi Technical University, Box 256, Takoradi, Ghana.

Kofi Appiah Sakyi

Department of Physician Assistantship, Presbyterian University, Ghana.

Anthony Jacobs

Department of Mathematics, Statistics and Actuarial Science, Takoradi Technical University, Box 256, Takoradi, Ghana.

Kelvin Eshun

Department of Mathematical Science, University of South Dakota, South Dakota, USA.

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

Malaria in endemic areas can be symptomatic or asymptomatic, affecting regular laboratory results. University students are relevant because parasitaemia can be identified accidentally, but haematological and biochemical alterations are difficult to interpret without local comparative evidence. This study examined asymptomatic and symptomatic malaria laboratory profiles in Takoradi Technical University students in Nzimah Mensah Hall and Prof. Duncan Hall. The study employed cross-sectional comparative design. 100 asymptomatic and 50 symptomatic malaria-positive students were recruited. Microscopy, Sysmex XN-350 haematological testing, and Humastar 100 biochemical testing were performed on venous blood for malaria confirmation. Data were analysed using R-studio. Group differences were analysed using t-tests or Mann–Whitney U tests with effect size calculation, and Spearman correlation examined parasite density relationships in asymptomatic cases. In symptomatic patients, parasite density was greater (2556.26 ± 2117.73 parasites/µL) than in asymptomatic instances (758.37 ± 1216.94 parasites/µL). Symptomatic students had lower haemoglobin (10.77 ± 2.36 vs 12.94 ± 2.01 g/dL), lower platelet counts (176.46 ± 76.13 vs 293.99 ± 76.25 ×10⁹/L), and higher ALT, AST, and creatinine levels. In asymptomatic cases, parasite density ranged from 21 to 9458 parasites/µL and had a slight connection with platelet count (ρ = 0.224, p = 0.025). Asymptomatic malaria in TTU students is stable in the lab despite changing parasite loads, while symptomatic malaria causes heavier parasitaemia and haematological and biochemical abnormalities.

Keywords: Hepatic dysfunction markers, thrombocytopenia, Cohen’s d effect size, campus health screening


How to Cite

Addor, John Awuah, Govinda Das Yankah, Issaka Sulemana, James Atta Dadson, Kofi Appiah Sakyi, Anthony Jacobs, and Kelvin Eshun. 2026. “Comparative Analysis of Haematological and Biochemical Profiles in Asymptomatic and Symptomatic Malaria in Relation to Parasite Density”. Asian Journal of Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology 18 (3):29-44. https://doi.org/10.9734/ajbgmb/2026/v18i3527.

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