Malaria.

Although global morbidity and mortality have decreased substantially, malaria, a parasite infection of red blood cells, still kills roughly 2000 people per day, most of whom are children in Africa. Two factors largely account for these decreases; increased deployment of insecticide-treated bednets a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: White, N, Pukrittayakamee, S, Hien, T, Faiz, M, Mokuolu, O, Dondorp, A
Format: Book section
Published: 2014
_version_ 1797075983813050368
author White, N
Pukrittayakamee, S
Hien, T
Faiz, M
Mokuolu, O
Dondorp, A
author_facet White, N
Pukrittayakamee, S
Hien, T
Faiz, M
Mokuolu, O
Dondorp, A
author_sort White, N
collection OXFORD
description Although global morbidity and mortality have decreased substantially, malaria, a parasite infection of red blood cells, still kills roughly 2000 people per day, most of whom are children in Africa. Two factors largely account for these decreases; increased deployment of insecticide-treated bednets and increased availability of highly effective artemisinin combination treatments. In large trials, parenteral artesunate (an artemisinin derivative) reduced severe malaria mortality by 22·5% in Africa and 34·7% in Asia compared with quinine, whereas adjunctive interventions have been uniformly unsuccessful. Rapid tests have been an important addition to microscopy for malaria diagnosis. Chemopreventive strategies have been increasingly deployed in Africa, notably intermittent sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine treatment in pregnancy, and monthly amodiaquine-sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine during the rainy season months in children aged between 3 months and 5 years across the sub-Sahel. Enthusiasm for malaria elimination has resurfaced. This ambitious but laudable goal faces many challenges, including the worldwide economic downturn, difficulties in elimination of vivax malaria, development of pyrethroid resistance in some anopheline mosquitoes, and the emergence of artemisinin resistance in Plasmodium falciparum in southeast Asia. We review the epidemiology, clinical features, pathology, prevention, and treatment of malaria.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T23:57:48Z
format Book section
id oxford-uuid:74d9676f-6389-4afe-a9ce-1688b5cf4eef
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-06T23:57:48Z
publishDate 2014
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:74d9676f-6389-4afe-a9ce-1688b5cf4eef2022-03-26T20:05:37ZMalaria.Book sectionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_3248uuid:74d9676f-6389-4afe-a9ce-1688b5cf4eefSymplectic Elements at Oxford2014White, NPukrittayakamee, SHien, TFaiz, MMokuolu, ODondorp, AAlthough global morbidity and mortality have decreased substantially, malaria, a parasite infection of red blood cells, still kills roughly 2000 people per day, most of whom are children in Africa. Two factors largely account for these decreases; increased deployment of insecticide-treated bednets and increased availability of highly effective artemisinin combination treatments. In large trials, parenteral artesunate (an artemisinin derivative) reduced severe malaria mortality by 22·5% in Africa and 34·7% in Asia compared with quinine, whereas adjunctive interventions have been uniformly unsuccessful. Rapid tests have been an important addition to microscopy for malaria diagnosis. Chemopreventive strategies have been increasingly deployed in Africa, notably intermittent sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine treatment in pregnancy, and monthly amodiaquine-sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine during the rainy season months in children aged between 3 months and 5 years across the sub-Sahel. Enthusiasm for malaria elimination has resurfaced. This ambitious but laudable goal faces many challenges, including the worldwide economic downturn, difficulties in elimination of vivax malaria, development of pyrethroid resistance in some anopheline mosquitoes, and the emergence of artemisinin resistance in Plasmodium falciparum in southeast Asia. We review the epidemiology, clinical features, pathology, prevention, and treatment of malaria.
spellingShingle White, N
Pukrittayakamee, S
Hien, T
Faiz, M
Mokuolu, O
Dondorp, A
Malaria.
title Malaria.
title_full Malaria.
title_fullStr Malaria.
title_full_unstemmed Malaria.
title_short Malaria.
title_sort malaria
work_keys_str_mv AT whiten malaria
AT pukrittayakamees malaria
AT hient malaria
AT faizm malaria
AT mokuoluo malaria
AT dondorpa malaria