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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (
malaria
)
44,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The antigenicity of altered structures induced by Plasmodium falciparum in the membranes of infected Aotus monkey and human erythrocytes was examined. Antisera were obtained from monkeys made immune to
malaria
. Bound antibodies were shown to be localized on the knob protrusions of infected erythrocytes of both human and monkey origin and from both in vitro and in vivo infections. Therefore, P. falciparum infection has produced similar antigenic changes in the erythrocyte surfaces of both man and monkey. Uninfected erythrocytes and all knobless-infected erythrocytes bound no antibody from immune sera. Strains of P. falciparum from widely different geographic areas that were cultured in vitro in human erythrocytes induced structures (knobs) which have common antigenicity. Merozoites were agglutinated by cross-linking of their cell coats when incubated with immune sera. The binding of
ferritin
-labeled antibody was heavy on the coats of both homologous and heterologous strains of the parasite, indicating that the merozoite surfaces of these strains share common antigens.
...
PMID:Antigenicity of the infected-erythrocyte and merozoite surfaces in Falciparum malaria. 9 58
We present here the physicochemical and biochemical properties of NBD-DFO, the 7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (NBD) derivative of the siderophore, desferrioxamine B (DFO) (Lytton et al., Mol. Pharmacol. 40, 584, 1991). Modification of DFO at its terminal amine renders it more lipophilic, imparts to it fluorescent properties, and is conservative of the high-affinity iron(III) binding capacity. NBD-DFO partitions readily from aqueous solution into n-octanol (Pcoeff = 5) and displays solvent-induced shifts in absorption and fluorescence spectra. The relative quantum yield of the probe's fluorescence increases over a 10-fold range with decreasing dielectric constant of the solvent. Fluorescence is quenched upon binding of iron(III) to the probe. We demonstrate here the application of NBD-DFO for the specific detection and monitoring of iron (III) in solutions and iron(III) mobilization from cells. Interactions between fluorescent siderophore and the ferriproteins
ferritin
and transferrin were monitored under physiological conditions. Iron removal from
ferritin
was evident by the demonstrable quenching of NBD-DFO fluorescence by scavenged iron(III). Quantitation of iron sequestered from cells by NBD-DFO or from other siderophore-iron(III) complexes was accomplished by dissociation of NBD-DFO-Fe complex by acidification and addition of excess ethylenediamin-etetraacetic acid. The sensitivity of the method and the iron specificity indicate its potential for monitoring chelatable iron under conditions of iron-mediated cell damage, iron overload, and diseases of iron imbalance such as
malaria
.
...
PMID:Monitoring of iron(III) removal from biological sources using a fluorescent siderophore. 133 42
Anthropometric measurements were made and serum iron and
ferritin
levels determined in a group of Gambian children at the beginning of the rainy season and these findings were related to the
malaria
experience of the children during the following
malaria
transmission season. Susceptibility to
malaria
was not correlated with prior weight-for-age, height-for-age, weight-for-height or serum albumin, or with serum iron, serum iron binding capacity nor serum
ferritin
. Thus, our findings do not provide any support for the view that poor nutritional status, as assessed by anthropometric measurements, or iron deficiency protect against
malaria
infection. Children who developed a clinical attack of
malaria
accompanied by a high level of parasitaemia tended to have a higher mean weight-for-age at the beginning of the rainy season than did children who had a clinical attack accompanied by a low level of parasitaemia, but the difference between groups was not statistically significant. However, they had a significantly higher mean serum
ferritin
level (P less than 0.01).
...
PMID:The relationship between anthropometric measurements and measurements of iron status and susceptibility to malaria in Gambian children. 178 Sep 80
Anemia (hemoglobin less than 110 g/L) was documented in 36 children of both sexes aged 1-12 y who were divided into two groups:
malaria
and other infections. The control subjects were 10 children of similar age with no anemia and without any apparent infections. Plasma
ferritin
concentrations (median, range) were higher in the anemic patients (203 micrograms/L, 21-5000 micrograms/L) than in control children (52 micrograms/L, 25-239 micrograms/L) although
ferritin
concentrations in those with
malaria
were still within the normal range (99 micrograms/L, 21-205 micrograms/L). In the rest of the anemic group, five patients had plasma
ferritin
concentrations greater than 1000 micrograms/L. There was no difference in riboflavin status between control subjects and patients or between the two anemic groups. Severity of anemia was no different between the two anemic groups either. The data indicate that riboflavin deficiency makes no contribution to the infection-induced elevation in plasma
ferritin
and that the contribution of
malaria
is smaller than that of other unidentified factors.
...
PMID:Plasma ferritin concentrations in anemic children: relative importance of malaria, riboflavin deficiency, and other infections. 230 51
Haematological and iron parameters, measured in 907 children aged from 6 months to 5 years in rural Gambia at the start of the rainy season, differed from those in American reference populations as follows: mean haemoglobin levels were much lower at ages 1 and 2 years and mean levels of mean corpuscular volume (MCV) were lower at all ages (at age 1 year mean haemoglobin was 11.2 g/dl and mean MCV 68.2 fl); in a sample of 249 children randomly selected from the whole study population, mean serum iron levels were similar but mean transferrin saturation and mean serum
ferritin
levels were lower, especially at ages 1-3 years (at age 1 year mean serum iron was 11.1 mumol/l, mean transferrin saturation 16.9%, and geometric mean serum
ferritin
8.8 ng/ml. A total of 213 children (23%) whose haemoglobin and mean corpuscular volume were both less than the 3rd percentile of the reference population received oral iron or placebo from their mothers during the rainy season when
malaria
transmission is maximal. Mean levels of haemoglobin, mean corpuscular volume, serum iron, transferrin saturation and serum
ferritin
rose in the iron-treated group and fell in the placebo group at all ages, except under 1 year for serum
ferritin
, to produce significant differences between the groups by the end of the study. Total iron-binding capacity showed no significant changes during the study. We concluded that oral iron given by the mother during the rainy season can be used to treat iron-deficiency anaemia in Gambian children who would otherwise become more anaemic.
...
PMID:Iron-deficiency anaemia and its response to oral iron: report of a study in rural Gambian children treated at home by their mothers. 247 48
A placebo-controlled trial of intramuscular iron dextran prophylaxis for two-month-old infants was carried out on the north coast of Papua New Guinea where there is high transmission of
malaria
. The results indicate that the placebo group became relatively iron deficient whereas the iron dextran group had adequate iron stores and, in the absence of
malaria
, a higher mean haemoglobin. However in the iron dextran group there was a higher prevalence of
malaria
, as judged by parasite and spleen rates at 6- and 12-month follow-up; a lower haemoglobin associated with
malaria
when compared with the placebo group and a greater reticulocytosis in response to
malaria
infection. Within the placebo group it was noticed that the
malaria
rates were lower at follow-up in those infants who had had a low birth haemoglobin. In neither group was there apparent suppression of marrow activity in the presence of
malaria
.
Malaria
infection in both groups was associated with a significantly raised serum
ferritin
level and transferrin saturation. Over-all these data give evidence for a protective role of iron deficiency against
malaria
and would argue against the injudicious use of iron replacement in areas where
malaria
is endemic.
...
PMID:Iron supplementation increases prevalence and effects of malaria: report on clinical studies in Papua New Guinea. 310 Dec 43
Ninety-four per cent of 169 patients with cerebral
malaria
developed anaemia (haematocrit less than 35 per cent) and 30 per cent required blood transfusion to maintain the haematocrit at more than 21 per cent. Anaemia was at its worst on admission in 58 patients (34 per cent); in the rest the haematocrit fell further, reaching its nadir one to 17 days later (mean 2.3 days). The mean lowest haematocrit was 24.3 +/- 7.2 per cent (+/- 1 SD) and the mean maximum fall was 7.9 +/- 5.6 per cent. Anaemia was more severe in patients with bacterial infection, retinal haemorrhages, schizontaemia and in pregnancy. The lowest haematocrit correlated with admission parasitaemia (r = -0.33, p less than 0.001), total serum bilirubin (r = -0.25, p less than 0.01) and serum creatinine (r = -0.22, p less than 0.01). In 23 patients with uncomplicated falciparum
malaria
the mean serum iron on admission was 53 micrograms/dl (range 16-157) and the mean serum
ferritin
1773 ng/ml (range 170-10 000). There was a significant (p less than 0.001) rise in serum iron 96 h after starting antimalarial treatment; the serum
ferritin
declined slowly over several weeks. Stainable iron was present in all marrows examined and in eight patients the characteristic pattern of the anaemia of chronic disorders was seen. Seventy-three per cent of patients had dyserythropoiesis which was moderate to gross in 36 per cent. Dyserythropoiesis and erythrophagocytosis were often present on admission but sometimes appeared after the parasitaemia had cleared and persisted for at least three weeks into convalescence. These disturbances in iron metabolism and haemopoiesis are not completely explicable by red blood cell parasitisation. They may contribute more to the anaemia than has previously been recognised.
...
PMID:The importance of anaemia in cerebral and uncomplicated falciparum malaria: role of complications, dyserythropoiesis and iron sequestration. 352 85
The distribution of anionic residues on the surface of erythrocytes infected with Plasmodium falciparum was studied using cationized
ferritin
(CF) and transmission electron microscopy. CF staining of uninfected erythrocytes or erythrocytes infected with a knobless variant resulted in a dense and uniform distribution of
ferritin
particles; however, when red cells infected with a knob-inducing variant were exposed to CF, aggregates of
ferritin
particles were observed in the region of membrane elevation. Lectin binding to the erythrocyte surface was visualized by transmission electron microscopy using
ferritin
-conjugated lectins and lectin-fetuin-gold. No differences were observed in the lectin-binding patterns of
malaria
-infected or uninfected erythrocytes using WGA (wheat-germ agglutinin), RCA (ricin), and Limax flavus lectin. In distinct contrast to the uniform distribution of
ferritin
particles seen with these lectins was the appearance of clusters of
ferritin
-ConA over the knobby regions. Localized aggregates of ConA were not seen in knob-free areas or on the surface of red cells infected with a knobless variant. No significant differences were found in the agglutination reactions of normal and infected cells with the Cancer antennarius lectin specific for O-acylated sialic acids.
...
PMID:Plasmodium falciparum: regional differences in lectin and cationized ferritin binding to the surface of the malaria-infected human erythrocyte. 352 94
An assessment of iron and folic acid status, blood thick film and haemoglobin (Hb) electrophoresis was performed on 126 pregnant women (and their newborn infants) and in ninety-five menstruating women in Cotonou (Benin). Anaemia (according to the World Health Organization (1972] was observed in 55% of pregnant women and in 39% of menstruating women. Fe-deficiency was defined as a low serum
ferritin
concentration (12 micrograms/l or less), combined with a low transferrin saturation (less than 16%) or a high erythrocyte protoporphyrin level (more than 3 micrograms/g Hb), or both. A moderate elevation in the serum
ferritin
concentration (between 13 and 50 micrograms/l), associated with a low transferrin saturation or a high erythrocyte protoporphyrin level, or both, indicated Fe-deficiency in an inflammatory context. Fe-deficiency was present in 73% of pregnant women and in 41% of menstruating women. Folate deficiency (defined as erythrocyte folate below 160 micrograms/l) was observed in 45% of pregnant women. In pregnant women, anaemia was associated with Fe-deficiency in 83% of cases and with folate deficiency in 48% of cases. Haemoglobinopathies were mainly heterozygous and did not seem to contribute significantly to anaemia. Intensity of
malaria
was not related to Hb level, but Plasmodium falciparum was found in 99% of subjects. Hb concentration and mean corpuscular volume were significantly lower in babies born of Fe-deficient mothers than in babies born of Fe-sufficient mothers. Hb concentration in newborn infants was positively correlated with maternal serum
ferritin
.
...
PMID:Nutritional anaemia in pregnant Beninese women: consequences on the haematological profile of the newborn. 355 28
To establish the prevalence of anaemia in pregnant women in Mozambique and to determine the locally most important causes of the disease, 881 pregnant women were examined at nine sites in seven of Mozambique's 10 provinces. In Maputo, the capital city, an additional 91 anaemic gravidae were compared to 207 parturients chosen at random. The study comprised interviews, and clinical and laboratory investigations. Between 5 and 15% of the pregnant women at the different sites had haemoglobin (Hb) values below 90 g/l and 58% had levels below 110 g/l. Inspection of mucosal membranes detected almost all the anaemic women with Hb values below 80 g/l. Nulliparous women were more prone to be anaemic. Iron deficiency and
malaria
were the main causes of anaemia, with malnutrition also contributing. Occasional cases of folic acid deficiency were found among severely anaemic women but no cases of significant deficiency of vitamin B12 were encountered. Sickle cell disease was not found to contribute significantly to anaemia of pregnancy in Mozambique. The mean corpuscular haemoglobin concentration (MCHC) proved more sensitive, under these conditions, than serum
ferritin
in detecting iron deficiency in anaemic women. Packed cell volume (PCV) analysis may substitute Hb analysis when screening for pregnancy anaemia in Mozambique.
...
PMID:Anaemia of pregnancy in Mozambique. 378 85
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