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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (malaria)
44,886 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Haemoglobin concentration, serum iron, iron binding capacity, transferrin saturation, free erythrocyte protoporphyrin and serum ferritin (SF) were measured in 66 elite non-pregnant and 95 pregnant (27 elite and 68 non-elite) Nigerian women at Zaria, in the guinea savanna. Anaemia (as defined) was observed in 46% non-pregnant, 37% pregnant elite and 52% pregnant non-elite women. Iron deficiency (as defined) was diagnosed in 54, 30 and 25%, respectively. The mean SF in pregnant elite (28.9 micrograms l-1 was lower, but not significantly, than in pregnant non-elite women (33.6 micrograms l-1, either because of less inflammatory disease or because of more iron deficiency. The prevalence of anaemia tended to fall with increasing parity, being 52% in primigravidae and 40% in grande-multigravidae; this was probably due to greater risk of malaria-induced anaemia in primigravidae. In contrast, prevalence of iron deficiency increased with parity, being 18 and 35%, respectively, in primigravidae and grande-multigravidae. Anaemia and iron deficiency were seen most frequently in the third trimester. Pregnant women in the north of Nigeria require iron supplements irrespective of socioeconomic status or maternal parity.
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PMID:Anaemia and iron status of pregnant and non-pregnant women in the guinea savanna of Nigeria. 408 57

The serum proteins supposed to be indicative of the nutritional status, albumin, prealbumin and transferrin, as well as the serum proteinase inhibitors alpha 1-protease inhibitor (alpha 1-antichymotrypsin (Ach) and alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M) were measured in 14 Thai males suffering from uncomplicated falciparum malaria on the day of admission and after treatment with mefloquin on the 2nd, 28th and 63rd day. The same serum proteins had been determined from 31 healthy Thai males. Upon admission albumin and prealbumin concentrations had been lower and Ach higher in malaria patients compared with healthy Thai males. A significantly higher alpha 1 PI value was observed on the day of admission compared with the 28th day of the malaria patients. Only on the day of admission and only for the patients was a statistically significant negative linear regression found for albumin and prealbumin with Ach and a positive correlation for prealbumin with alpha 2 M as well as for albumin and transferrin correlated with alpha 1 PI. In well-nourished malaria patients the synthesis of the "acute phase reactants", alpha 1 PI and Ach, might be enhanced and in a reverse relationship the synthesis of albumin, pre-albumin and transferrin depressed.
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PMID:Human serum proteins indicative for the nutritional status and serum proteinase inhibitors in uncomplicated falciparum malaria. 619 95

In order to evaluate the prevalence of anemia in infants under one year of age and ascertain the main etiologic factors, a survey was conducted in Moundou, Chad at the end of the rainy season. Tests were performed in 144 infants to determine hemoglobin levels, mean erythrocyte volume, transferrin saturation coefficient, serum iron level, Plasmodium positivity on blood smears, and nutritional status according to GOMEZ. Using the criteria defined by the World Health Organization, 139 infants were diagnosed as anemic including 19 cases classified as severe (hemoglobin level less than 5 g/dl). In addition, 32 of the 141 infants studied (22.7%) presented iron deficiency confirmed by two positive indicators. Serology demonstrated malaria in 45% of infants. Mean hemoglobin levels were significantly lower in infants with positive blood smears and this lowering increased the higher serum parasite levels. Nutritional status was directly correlated with hemoglobin level. This data suggests that malaria plays a major etiologic role in anemia in infants particularly severe anemia. This finding justifies use of antimalarial chemoprophylaxis in infants and the Centers for the Extended Vaccination Program provide the framework.
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PMID:[Anemia in infants less than 1 year old in Moundou, Chad: prevalence and etiology]. 774 26

To determine if the elevated transferrin saturations found in some patients with severe malaria are associated with an adverse outcome in cerebral malaria, we retrospectively measured baseline saturations in stored serum samples from 81 Zambian children with strictly defined cerebral malaria. The children had been treated with quinine, sulfadox-ine-pyrimethamine, and intravenous infusions of either placebo (n = 39) or the iron chelator, desferrioxamine B (n = 42), in a previously reported trial (Gordeuk et al, N Engl J Med 327:1473, 1992). More than one-third of children in both the placebo- and iron chelator-treated groups had transferrin saturations exceeding 43%, which is 3 standard deviations above the expected mean for age. Among children receiving quinine and placebo, those with elevated transferrin saturations had a delayed estimated median time to recover full consciousness (68.2 hours) compared with those with saturations < or = 43% (25.4 hours; P = .006). The addition of iron chelation to quinine therapy in children with high saturations appeared to hasten recovery (P = .046). We conclude that increased transferrin saturations may be associated with delayed recovery from coma during standard therapy for cerebral malaria and that serum iron and total iron binding capacity should be measured in future studies.
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PMID:Transferrin saturation and recovery from coma in cerebral malaria. 775 63

The effect of Plasmodium falciparum malaria on the iron status was determined in 80 children: normal children without malaria (20) and with malaria (20), and sickle cell anaemia without malaria (17) and with malaria (23). Iron status was assessed using serum transferrin, serum iron, transferrin saturation and haemoglobin. The non-malaria sickle cell anaemia (SCA) group had lower transferrin (234.0 +/- 21.0) and haemoglobin (8.1 +/- 0.4) than non-malaria normal group (260.6 +/- 17.1 mg/100 ml, and 12.5% respectively). Serum iron was higher in sickle cell anaemia (125.1 +/- 17.1) than non-malaria normals (119.2 +/- 1 microgram/100 ml). Malaria caused an increase in serum transferrin, TIBC and serum iron in both normal and SCA children; these changes were more dramatic in normal than in SCA children.
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PMID:Plasmodium falciparum malaria: its effects on some haematological parameters in normal and sickle cell Nigerian children. 789 91

Clinical and experimental evidence suggests that iron-deficient hosts are less susceptible to severe malaria and that iron supplementation aggravates infection. In the present study, 60 weanling Wistar rats were fed standard diets with different iron concentrations: 21 mg/kg (group 1), 45 mg/kg (group 2) and 113 mg/kg (group 3). Ferrous sulfate (FeSO4 x 7H2O) was added to the normal-iron and iron-supplemented diets (groups 2 and 3, respectively). Data are reported as mean +/- SEM. After 16 days of regimen, eight rats from each group were killed to measure serum iron concentration (SI) and transferrin saturation capacity (TSC). At this moment, rats from group 1 were underweight and their dietary intake was significantly lower than that of animals from the other groups. Severe iron deficiency (SI = 49.2 +/- 4.5 micrograms/100 ml and TSC = 8.3 +/- 0.7%) was observed in rats from group 1, while the animals from the other groups were iron-sufficient (group 2: SI = 186.5 +/- 28.5 micrograms/100 ml and TSC = 27.3 +/- 3.4%; group 3: SI = 137.3 +/- 18.2 micrograms/100 ml and TSC = 21.3 +/- 2.3%). Nine animals from each group were then infected with the malaria parasite Plasmodium berghei, whereas three animals from each group were used as noninfected controls. Parasitemias (% of infected red blood cells) peaked 7 days post-infection in animals from groups 2 and 3 (mean values of 2.4% and 1.7%, respectively), but in animals from group 1 parasitemias increased until the 9th day post-infection (mean at peak, 2.3%) and parasite clearance was significantly slower than in the other groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effect of dietary iron on the course of Plasmodium berghei malaria in young rats. 813 31

The relationship of serum protein polymorphisms to the presence of malaria antibodies was studied in 473 muria gond tribal subjects from Bastar district, Central India, an area endemic for both P. falciparum and P. vivax infection. A control group of 100 subjects in Delhi, which has a low prevalence of malaria, was also studied. Serum proteins (transferrin, haptoglobin and albumin) were analyzed for polymorphic variants by starch gel electrophoresis. Malarial antibodies were assayed by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), while thin blood films were screened for the presence of malaria parasites. Among serum proteins transferrin CD variant showed significant correlation with malarial infection. There were no significant differences observed between Hp1 and Hp2 variants of haptoglobin in relation to presence of malarial antibodies. Statistical analysis for albumin variants was not attempted because the number of individuals showing abnormal bands was small.
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PMID:Serum protein polymorphisms and malaria in Madya Pradesh, India. 826 24

The hypotheses that iron-deficient hosts are less susceptible to severe malaria and that iron supplementation aggravates infection have been supported by some clinical and experimental evidence. In the present study, the course of Plasmodium berghei infection was monitored in an experimental model of dietary iron deficiency and iron supplementation. Weanling Wistar rats were fed purified diets with different iron concentrations: 20 mg/kg (Group D, n = 24), 50 mg/kg (Group N, n = 24) and 100 mg/kg (Group S, n = 12). After 15 d, rats from Group D were anemic (mean hemoglobin 81 g/l). The next day, 12 rats from Group D (thereafter Group DS) and 12 rats from Group N (thereafter Group NS) were transferred to the same iron-supplemented diet as in Group S, whereas the remaining animals (Groups D, N and S) were maintained on the original diets for further 14 d. At that time, 9 rats from each group were inoculated intraperitoneally with 10(6) erythrocytic parasites (P. berghei ANKA strain), whereas 3 rats from each group remained as noninfected controls. All animals were killed 14 d after inoculation, when significantly lower levels of hemoglobin, serum iron and percent transferrin saturation were found in infected animals from Group D compared with all other groups. However, the time course of parasitemias was similar in all groups. These data indicate that the development of P. berghei was neither suppressed by iron deficiency nor enhanced by iron supplementation in this model. Furthermore, iron repletion during infection did produce a noticeable improvement of hematological variables in previously iron-deficient animals.
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PMID:Dietary iron supplementation does not aggravate experimental malaria in young rats. 863 20

Blood examination was conducted for the four Gidra-speaking village groups in Papua New Guinea, who were characterized by high Fe intake and high malaria prevalence with marked inter-village differences. The northern riverine villagers, whose Fe intake was higher than the other three village groups, did not suffer from Fe-deficiency anaemia in their malaria-endemic environment; nor did the inland villagers, with their second highest Fe intake and their malaria-free environment, suffer from Fe-deficiency anaemia. However, several individuals of the southern riverine village suffered from anaemia in a malaria-endemic environment, although their Fe intake was almost the same as the inland villagers'. A considerable proportion of the coastal villagers were anaemic, reflecting the lowest Fe intake and the highest malaria prevalence. An inter-village comparison of the relationships between haemoglobin levels and transferrin saturation revealed that the southern riverine villagers needed smaller amounts of circulating Fe for erythropoiesis than the northern riverine and inland villagers, reflecting the long-term human-environment conditions such as the density of malaria vectors and the people's dietary habits. Fe supplementation was not judged effective against hypoferraemia and/or anaemia in such a population. As the incidence of malaria had no significant long-lasting effect on Fe stores or circulating Fe concentration, but did have an effect on anaemia, the hypothesis that malaria causes a transfer of Fe from the blood to parenchymal tissues as a defence against infectious diseases was not supported.
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PMID:Iron nutrition and anaemia in a malaria-endemic environment: haematological investigation of the Gidra-speaking population in lowland Papua New Guinea. 888 7

The immunological specificites of two human rheumatoid factor-reactive IgG monoclonal antibodies derived from unstimulated rheumatoid synovial lymphocytes have been analysed. A malaria antigen-reactive IgG monoclonal antibody from an immune donor served as a control. Purified IgG monoclonal antibody from one IgG-RF hybridoma (L1), but not from the other IgG-RF hybridoma (D1) or the anti-malaria monoclonal antibody, exhibited dose-dependent binding to multiple self and non-self antigens such as ds-DNA, cytochrome-c, bovine thyroglobulin, transferrin, cellulose and lipopolysaccharide and therefore was considered polyreactive. The immunological specificity was confirmed by inhibition experiments using the same soluble antigens as inhibitors. The polyreactivity of the IgG-RF MoAb was markedly inhibited by absorption with glycoproteins such as thyroglobulin, a commonly used target for xenoreactive natural antibodies, and cytochrome-c, indicating that the monoclonal antibody is reactive with epitopes expressed on these ligands. Since some naturally occurring antibodies are carbohydrate specific, the authors tested the IgG-RF MoAb for possible carbohydrate specificity. Absorption with certain polysaccharides containing only one or two different sugar moieties did not inhibit the binding reactivities to any of the tested antigens. Polyreactivity of the monoclonal antibody, unlike most xenoreactive natural antibodies, was not caused by reactivity with (gal alpha 1-3gal) as indicated by the remaining binding reactivity after alpha-galactosidase treatment of the antigen. Removal of the N-linked glycosylation sites within the Fc portion of target IgG markedly reduced the antibody binding. The findings suggest that the carbohydrate content of the antigen is necessary for binding of the polyreactive IgG-RF MoAb. Reactivity to carbohydrate antigens may readily explain the so-called multispecificity of certain antibodies.
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PMID:Binding specificities of a polyreactive and a monoreactive human monoclonal IgG rheumatoid factor: role of oligosaccharides. 894 98


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