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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (
malaria
)
44,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Spleen macrophages from Plasmodium berghei-infected mice are more efficient in the ingestion of parasitized reticulocytes than spleen macrophages obtained from normal animals. Other indications of spleen macrophage activation detected during malarial infection are enhanced macrophage spreading and increased phagocytosis of opsonized and nonopsonized sheep erythrocytes (E). Peritoneal macrophages are not activated to a significant degree. The appearance of antibodies directed against Forssman antigen, but not to other erythrocyte antigens, is also a feature of this infection and explains the ingestion of unsensitized E by spleen macrophages of the diseased animals. The recognition and ingestion of parasitized reticulocytes by infected mice in mediated by
cold
-agglutinin type immunoglobulins that appear during P. berghei infection and can be blocked by the Fc-binding protein A from Staphylococcus aureus. In advanced stages of the disease, the serum of infected animals inhibits phagocytosis, probably because of the high level of circulating immune complexes. Thus, the clearance of
malaria
parasites is regulated by several elements of the immune system, in addition to levels of specific antimerozoite antibodies, including the amount of antibodies bound to reticulocytes, the presence of circulating immune complexes, and the degree of macrophage stimulation.
...
PMID:Immune phagocytosis in murine malaria. 44 88
Rat-adapted Plasmodium chabaudi caused a syndrome characterized by hemolytic anemia, splenomegaly, and glomerulonephritis. All rats recovered and appeared normal after 4 weeks despite persistence of proteinuria. Serologic studies on the malarious rats revealed that the infection was associated with a soluble antigen which was present concurrently with antibody in plasma, in material eluted from blood cells, in extracts of kidney tissues, and in the urine. This antigen appeared to be identical with one extracted from P. chabaudi parasites and did not cross-react with antigens of Plasmodium gallinaceum. Tests for the
cold
-active hemagglutin (CAH) and the globulin associated serum antigen (SA) previously associated with acute
malaria
, revealed that CAH, but not SA, was present. From these observations it is suggested that soluble complexes of the parasite antigen and its antibody may have been causal in this syndrome.
...
PMID:Experimental infection with Plasmodium chabaudi in rats: antigen and antibody associated with anemia and glomerulonephritis of acute infection. 59 39
Four cases of
malaria
are described. Five to nine days elapsed between the onset of clinical symptoms and the beginning of the anti-
malaria
chemotherapy. One of the patients died under signs of massive and nearly synchronous hemolysis during the last two hours of treatment. The
Malaria
tropica disease of the first and the second patient were first diagnosed as
common cold
with enteritic symptoms; the third patient showed signs of abdominal thyphoid fever and developed symptoms of intravascular coagulation. With the fourth case-
Malaria
tertiana-it shall be remembered that, if chemoprophylaxis starts too late, the disease is not suppressed but can be delayed: incubation period lasted ten weeks. The diagnostic procedure for the clinician and the pathogenetic mechanism are discussed: massive hemolysis and the possible influence of the chloroquine therapy, the intravascular coagulation and the elevation of the IgE level.
...
PMID:[Malaria: 4 case reports with "atypical" symptoms (author's transl)]. 64 83
Various workers, including T. D. Stewart, claim that the aboriginal Americas were relatively disease-free because of the bering Strait
cold
-screen, eliminating many pathogens, and the paucity of zoonotic infections because of few domestic animals. Evidence of varying validity suggests that precontact Americns had their own strains of treponemic infections, bacillary and amoebic dysenteries, influenza and viral penumonia and other respiratory diseases, salmonellosis and perhaps other food poisoning, various arthritides, some endoparasites such as the ascarids, and several geographically circumscribed diseases such as the rickettsial verruca (Carrion's disease) and New World leishmaniasis and trypanosomiasis. Questionably aboriginal are tuberculosis and typhus. Accordingly, virtually all the "crowd-type" ecopathogenic diseases such as smallpox, yellow fever, typhoid,
malaria
, measles, pertussis, polio, etc., appear to have been absent from the New World, and were only brought in by White conquerors and their Black slaves. My hypothesis is that native American medical care systems--especially in the more culturally advanced areas--were sufficiently sophisticated to deal with native disease entities with reasonable competence. But native medical systems could not cope with the "crowd-type" disease imports that struck Indian and Eskimos as "virgin-field" populations. Reanalysis of native population losses through a genocidal combination of diease, war, slavery and attendant cultural disruption by Dobyns, Cook and others strongly suggest that traditiona estimates underplayed the death toll by a factor of the general order of ten. This would make for an immediately pre-contact Indian population of some 90-111 million instead of the tradition 8-11 million. Evidence is growing that Indians may have been no more susceptible to new pathogens that are other "virgin soil" populations, and thus their immune systems need not be considered less effective than those in other people. Present-day high mortality rates in Indians of both continents from infectious disease imports may be more socioeconomic than anything else.
...
PMID:Aboriginal new world epidemiolgy and medical care, and the impact of Old World disease imports. 79 20
A survey of
cold
haemagglutinin using the normal and tyrpsinized group O red blood cells was performed in 101 normal individuals, 139 individuals with Plasmodium falciparum malaria, 115 individuals with various infections other than
malaria
and 46 cases of auto-immune haemolytic anaemia. A marked reduction in the incidence of
cold
haemagglutinin reacting with the normal group O red blood cell was observed in cases of P. falciparum with parasitaemia higher than 100 000/mm3. Although this was also found in other infections, the proposed mechanism seems to be different. Neither remarkable changes in the incidence of
cold
haemagglutinin reacting with trypsinized red blood cell not the rise of the titres of agglutination in both types of the red blood cells could be detected in P. falciparum malarial cases. The findings are somewhat unexpected and the possible causes are discussed.
...
PMID:A marked reduction in the incidence of cold haemagglutinin in Plasmodium falciparum malaria. 79 45
A
cold
-active hemagglutinin for trypsinized human type "O" erythrocytes (CAH) from blood of chickens with acute Plasmodium gallinaceum
malaria
was found to be associated with 19 S and 7 S globulin fractions of malarious chicken blood, but cleavage with 2-mercaptoethanol indicated that it was primarily of the IgM class of antibody. In serologic tests CAH reacted with trypsinized erythrocytes, and anti-chicken globulin. It did not react with other of the antigens or antibodies detected in the blood of malarious chickens. When the absorbed and eluted CAH was injected into normal chickens it produced an anaphylactic-like shock and caused a 25% reduction in red blood cell counts within 48 hours. Plasma samples collected during this interval showed signs of hemolysis. Reactions of blood cells from the recipient birds with fluorescein conjugated anti-chicken globulin indicated that CAH reacted with erythrocytes. The absence of fluorescent activity 3 days after injection suggested that these erythrocytes had been removed from the circulation. When normal chickens were injected with trypsinized autologous blood cells, CAH was detected within 3 days. The agglutination test again was active at temperatures below 22 degrees C and was negative when tested at 37 degrees C. In these birds the appearance of CAH was accompanied by reductions in red blood cell counts and by hemolysis. The results of these experiments suggest that CAH was not stimulated by plasmodial parasite antigen, but rather by autoantigens, which appear to be common to heterologous animal species, and which were in some manner expressed by the presence of the intracellular parasites, or by trypsin treatment. The experiments further suggest that this autohemagglutinin was partially causal of malarial anemia. The presence of other anemia factor(s) was indicated by anemia following injection of plasma that had been absorbed free of CAH.
...
PMID:Pathogenesis of acute avian malaria. II. Anemia mediated by a cold-active autohemagglutinin from the blood of chickens with acute Plasmodium gallinaceum infection. 80 65
Eperythrozoon coccoides and Haemobartonella muris produced in mice and rats respectively, essentially the same disease, characterized by anaemia, splenomegaly and in severe cases, haemoglobinuria with death. In both infections anaemia was associated with phagocytosis of erythrocytes by monocytes of the spleen, and with the presence of
cold
-active haema-glutinin for trypsinized red cells (CAH). An antigen similar to the serum antigen (SA) associated with acute
malaria
and babesiosis was also found in the blood of the anaemic animals. One or two days later antibody to SA (ABSA) was detected and for several days thereafter, both SA and ABSA could be detected in plasma samples. Anaemia crisis with haemoglobinuria was better correlated with the appearance of ABSA than with the presence of CAH. It is suggested that CAH, and complexes of SA and ABSA could have acted as anaemia factors and were in part causal in the sequestration or haemolysis of erythrocytes during acute infection.
...
PMID:Autoimmune factors associated with anaemia in acute Haemobartonella and Eperythrozoon infections of rodents. 94 46
Environmental health concerns in the Persian Gulf are peculiar to the geography of the region. Prevention of heat and solar injury deserves primary consideration, but
cold
injury also may occur in the desert. Immunizations are recommended against a number of diseases, while malarial chemoprophylaxis is necessary in Iraq and Kuwait. In addition to
malaria
, other parasitic diseases deserve consideration. Diarrheal diseases, diseases from the desert dust, and products of infected desert animals are of concern. Additional natural hazards are venomous bites from scorpions and desert snakes. Finally, threats of enemy action necessitated protection from nuclear biological and chemical weapons and LASER eye/skin injury. Unexploded ordinance will constitute a continuing hazard into the future.
...
PMID:Environmental health concerns of the Persian Gulf War. 149 14
Microlevel epidemiological variations in designing
malaria
control strategies were studied. Quantitative and qualitative variations were observed between two physiographic zones and between four different ecotypes within the zones of the Koraput district. While the peak transmission occurred in rainy season in the 600 m plateau (Jeypore zone), the same was observed in
cold
season in 150 m plateau (Malkangiri zone). The age specific parasite prevalence indicated a high degree of transmission and high level of acquired immunity in top- and foot-hill villages of both zones as compared to plain and riverine villages. Transmission was perennial in top-hill and foot-hill villages while it was of short period (indicated by infant parasite rate) in others. Since the period and intensity of transmission vary, an uniform residual insecticidal spray schedule as followed at present is not necessary. Majority of fever patients in top-hill villages were positive for Plasmodium falciparum and therefore may be treated for
malaria
without slide collection and examination. Evaluations may be done by sample surveys. These steps can optimize the
malaria
control operation in the district.
...
PMID:Microlevel epidemiological variations in malaria & its implications on control strategy. 179 47
The degree of utilisation of permethrin-impregnated curtains was assessed in a rural community near Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso. Results showed that in the first half of the night, until 11-11.30 p.m., curtains were only partially used by the community. Indeed by this time around 50% of houses had doors well protected by curtains and, over 35% of the community, children and adults, were staying outside. A very marked pattern of this behavior was found, wrong utilisation of curtains being higher in the warm season and lower in the
cold
season. On the one hand, this situation decreased the potential action of curtains as a barrier to avoid mosquito-man contact and, on the other hand, facilitated the exposure of community to the risk of outdoor infection. These findings may explain the variable level of efficacy showed by curtains in the prevention of
malaria
morbidity, which seems to be higher in the period between January and February, the winter season in Burkina Faso. The possible application of impregnated curtains as a community-based vector control method is discussed.
...
PMID:[Utilization of permethrin-impregnated curtains by the inhabitants of a rural community in Burkina Faso]. 184 17
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