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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (
malaria
)
44,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Nude mice died when infected with the normally avirulent malarial parasite Plasmodium berghei yoelii. Furthermore,
malaria
recrudesced in Nu/Nu mice after the termination of
acute disease
by treatment with clindamycin. Recrudescence was not observed in Nu/Nu mice that had been grafted with thymic tissue or treated with hyperimmune serum. Mice mad B cell deficient by treatment with anti-mu-chain serum also died when infected with P. berghei yoelii. The data suggest that a crucial role of the thymus in preventing recrudescent
malaria
in this model system is to provide a helper function in the production of protective antibody.
...
PMID:Prevention of recrudescent malaria in nude mice by thymic grafting or by treatment with hyperimmune serum. 33 Mar 96
1. Hypoglycaemia and lactic acidosis are important manifestations of severe falciparum
malaria
. To investigate hepatic gluconeogenesis in acute falciparum
malaria
, liver blood flow and galactose clearance were estimated in seven adult patients with moderately severe infection and seven patients with severe infection (three of whom died later). Nine patients were restudied in convalescence. 2. Liver blood flow, determined from the plasma clearance of Indocyanine Green, was lower in acute illness than in convalescence [16.1 (7.0) versus 23.9 (7.2) ml min-1 kg-1, mean (SD)], but this difference was not statistically significant (P = 0.15). There was a significant inverse correlation between admission venous plasma lactate concentrations and the liver blood flow estimated from the clearance of Indocyanine Green (rs = 0.71, P = 0.004). 3. The plasma clearance of galactose after intravenous injection was similar in the acute [15.4 (4.90) ml min-1 kg-1] and convalescent study [12.8 (2.1) ml min-1 kg-1]. The ratio of galactose clearance to Indocyanine Green clearance was significantly higher in
acute disease
[1.41 (0.51)] than in convalescence [0.70 (0.34)], largely because of the elevated ratios in severely ill patients [1.48 (0.50)]. 4. The rise in blood glucose concentration after galactose administration was significantly higher during acute illness [1.48 (0.72) mmol/l] than in convalescence [0.67 (0.41) mmol/l, P = 0.022], but the insulin response was similar, indicating reduced tissue insulin sensitivity. There was no significant change in the plasma concentrations of other metabolites (lactate, pyruvate, alanine and triacylglycerol) in either study. 5. These results suggest that the segment of the glycolytic pathway between galactose and glucose is unimpaired in patients with severe falciparum
malaria
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Hepatic blood flow and metabolism in severe falciparum malaria: clearance of intravenously administered galactose. 131 Sep 19
The Industrial Revolution ushered in a rapid transition from agriculture to industrialization. Some biological effects of this transition included increasing life expectancy, reduced infant mortality, and some decline in fertility. Reduced infant mortality first brought about an increase in life expectancy, but as humans were able to control infectious diseases, child and adult mortality also decreased. Now, accidents and chronic diseases are responsible for most mortality in many age groups. This shift from infectious diseases to accidents and chronic diseases is called the health transition. Japan and US are Pacific Basin countries which have relatively high life expectancy and low infant mortality (1988, 75.54 years vs. 71.38 years, and 4.4 vs. 9.9, respectively). These figures suggest that these countries rather advanced in the health transition. Japan may have better life expectancy than the US because of the effect of environmental factors, ethnic diversity, and health care differentials by social class on cardiovascular disease and cancer mortality. China and Thailand hold intermediate positions (67.98 years (1985-1990) vs. 63.82 years (1985-1986), and 32.4 vs. 39, respectively). Some research indicates that urban conditions and factory work increase the cardiovascular disease risk among the Chinese. Recent research suggests that access to immunization and modern medical care for
acute disease
are the only critical variables of the health transition rather than other variables. Papua New Guinea is not progressing very well (53.18 years and 58). Papua New Guinea has not yet been able to control infectious diseases, especially
malaria
. This comparison illustrates that populations progress through the health transition at different rates.
...
PMID:Health transition: examples from the western Pacific. 142 38
Halofantrine hydrochloride (HF) belongs to a new class of antimalarials, the phenanthrene methanols. Preliminary clinical studies suggested that an adult dose of 500 mg 6-hourly for three doses, with a weight-based regimen of 8 mg/kg 6-hourly for three doses in children, would be effective. In an ongoing clinical programme, 1973 patients with acute
malaria
were analysed, of whom 1474 (1315 with P. falciparum and 122 with P. vivax
malaria
) received the above regimen. In the studies 931 adults and older children were treated (61 with capsules and 870 with tablets) while 520 infants and young children used 5% or 2% suspension. The majority of studies were performed in areas of high chloroquine or multidrug resistance. Only eight (0.6%) of 1282 evaluable patients with falciparum
malaria
failed to clear their parasitaemias within 7 days. Recrudescence of parasitaemia occurred in 77 patients (6.0%). Reinfection cannot be excluded in several of the cases, where protection from
malaria
transmission was not maintained. The majority of recrudescent patients were either non-immune (normally residing in
malaria
-free areas) or were infants below 2 years of age. In vivax
malaria
cases, there were six recrudescences (5.4%). The mean parasite clearance time was 57.9 h and the fever clearance time 50.2 h in falciparum
malaria
cases, while the clearance times for vivax cases were 57.3 h and 49.6 h respectively. Clinical events were uncommon and consisted of mild transient diarrhoea or abdominal pain in less than 5% of cases. Laboratory findings were generally abnormalities related to the
acute disease
rather than drug treatment. Experience to date would indicate that HF is a safe and useful drug for the treatment of acute
malaria
, particularly in areas where there is extensive resistance to current antimalarials.
...
PMID:Clinical experience with halofantrine in the treatment of malaria. 210 Jul 32
To assess cellular immune function in
malaria
, 61 patients admitted to the Bangkok Hospital for Tropical Diseases with Plasmodium falciparum (PF) or Plasmodium vivax malaria were examined with the MULTITEST CMI system (Merieux Institute, Florida) to evaluate delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) during and after
acute disease
over 4 weeks. All patients demonstrated significantly decreased responsiveness to seven commonly encountered recall antigens. This deficit was most severe immediately upon admission (prior to therapy). Uncomplicated Pf cases demonstrated significant hyporesponsiveness only during Week 1. Responses in moderate/severe falciparum and all vivax patients gradually increased in Weeks 2 and 3 but remained significantly below control values. This study confirms functional cell-mediated immune deficits in falciparum
malaria
and, for the first time, shows hyporesponsiveness in vivax
malaria
. We conclude that
malaria
causes a pronounced CMI deficit that is still detectable in some individuals for 3-4 weeks after treatment of acute infection. These changes in DTH should be a consideration in future vaccine development and in evaluation of immune status in endemic areas.
...
PMID:Cutaneous delayed-type hypersensitivity responsiveness in patients during and after Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax infections. 755 89
A self-limiting psychosis characterized by visual and auditory hallucinations with or without aggressive behavior developed in two children 4 to 5 days after complete recovery from a cerebral
malaria
coma. Both patients had no family history of psychosis and were neurologically and mentally normal before the
acute disease
. A long-term prospective study to define the precise clinical spectrum of such manifestations in survivors of childhood cerebral
malaria
seems necessary.
...
PMID:Psychosis after cerebral malaria in children. 812 Sep 32
Monoclonal antibodies (Mab) were raised against haemoglobin (Hb) associated with Plasmodium falciparum protein and used to develop an ELISA, measuring circulating levels of released Hb. This assay was evaluated in different
malaria
patients in parallel with ELISA assays for C-reactive protein (CRP) and haptoglobin. Levels of Hb were negatively associated with levels of haptoglobin. Increased levels of serum Hb and CRP and decreased levels of haptoglobin were seen in Danish
malaria
patients. Consecutive studies showed that increased Hb levels were detectable 3-7 days after initiation of treatment probably because of drug induced destruction of infected erythrocytes. Increased levels of CRP were measured 0-3 days after initiation of treatment. The Hb assay was used in an epidemiological study of
malaria
in an area of Sudan with unstable
malaria
transmission. The proportion of Sudanese adults with detectable soluble Hb was higher in the rainy season with
malaria
transmission compared to the dry season. Hb levels in the rainy season were negatively associated with levels of haptoglobin. Most adults had increased levels of soluble Hb and decreased levels of haptoglobin 7 and 30 days after their treatment of P. falciparum
malaria
compared to the levels during
acute disease
. Thus, both soluble Hb and haptoglobin appear to be markers of recent P. falciparum infections. Very high levels of CRP protein were measured in some of the
malaria
patients at the day of treatment while lower levels were recorded 7 and 30 days after treatment. Soluble Hb levels were associated with malariometric parameters in a similar fashion to haptoglobin. The new Mab-based assay for measuring soluble Hb in the peripheral blood of
malaria
patients may be useful for future epidemiological studies of
malaria
.
...
PMID:Soluble haemoglobin is a marker of recent Plasmodium falciparum infections. 933 55
Healthy Gambian children, children with clinical Plasmodium falciparum malaria, and children with asymptomatic P. falciparum infections were studied to investigate whether antitoxic activities may contribute to protection against malarial symptoms. Markers of inflammatory reactions, soluble tumor necrosis factor receptor I, and C-reactive protein were found in high concentrations in children with symptomatic P. falciparum
malaria
compared with levels in children with asymptomatic P. falciparum infections or in healthy children, indicating that inflammatory reactions are induced only in children with clinical symptoms. Concentrations of soluble tumor necrosis factor receptor I and C-reactive protein were associated with levels of parasitemia. We detected antitoxic activities in sera as measured by their capacity to block toxin-induced Limulus amoebocyte lysate (LAL) activation. Symptomatic children had decreased capacity to block induction of LAL activation by P. falciparum exoantigen. The decreased blocking activity was restored in the following dry season, when the children had no clinical
malaria
. Symptomatic children also had the highest immunoglobulin G (IgG) reactivities to conserved P. falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein 1 and "Pfalhesin" (band #3) peptides, indicating that such IgG antibodies are stimulated by
acute disease
but are lost rapidly after the disease episode. Half of the children with symptomatic infections had low levels of haptoglobin, suggesting that these children had chronic P. falciparum infections which may have caused symptoms previously. Only a few of the children with asymptomatic P. falciparum infections had high parasite counts, and antitoxic immunity in the absence of antiparasite immunity appears to be rare among children in this community.
...
PMID:Decreased antitoxic activities among children with clinical episodes of malaria. 952 94
The Netherlands has been free from
malaria
since the early 1960, due to a combination of factors: active search and treatment of patients and parasite carriers, targeted use of insecticides, changes in farming and in housing of man and cattle, pollution of surface water with phosphates and the fact that surface waters became fresher. These factors reduced the mosquito population that is dependent on brackish water. The Dutch
malaria
mosquito cannot transmit the parasite of tropical
malaria
. The mosquito population could possibly increase due to measures to 'develop nature' but the number of parasite carriers, the
acute disease
manifestations, the quality and organization of the health care system make it extremely unlikely that local transmission will occur. Fears that
malaria
may become endemic and that the population in the western parts of the country will have to apply
malaria
chemoprophylaxis in the near future, are unfounded.
...
PMID:[A return of endemic malaria to the Netherlands is highly unlikely]. 1062 58
It is widely perceived that immunity to
malaria
is, to an extent, defective and that one component of this defective immune response is the inability to induce or maintain long-term memory responses. If true, this is likely to pose problems for development of an effective vaccine against
malaria
. In this article, we critically review and challenge this interpretation of the epidemiological and experimental evidence. While evasion and modulation of host immune responses clearly occurs and naturally acquired immunity is far from optimal, mechanisms to control blood-stage parasites are acquired and maintained by individuals living in endemic areas, allowing parasite density to be kept below the threshold for induction of
acute disease
. Furthermore, protective immunity to severe pathology is achieved relatively rapidly and is maintained in the absence of boosting by re-infection. Nevertheless, there are significant challenges to overcome. The need for multiple infections to acquire immunity means that young children remain at risk of infection for far too long. Persistent or frequent exposure to antigen seems to be required to maintain anti-parasite immunity (premunition). Lastly, pre-erythrocytic and sexual stages of the life cycle are poorly immunogenic, and there is little evidence of effective pre-erythrocytic or transmission-blocking immunity at the population level. While these problems might theoretically be due to defective immunological memory, we suggest alternative explanations. Moreover, we question the extent to which these problems are
malaria
-specific rather than generic (i.e. result from inherent limitations of the vertebrate immune system).
...
PMID:Does malaria suffer from lack of memory? 1536 Dec 47
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