Transcript Malaria

Malaria
By Jordan H.
March 15, 2010
What is Malaria?
 Malaria
is a parasite that enters the
blood.
 This parasite is a protozoan called
plasmodium.
 3 to 700 million people get malaria each
year, but only kills 1 to 2 million
 40% of the worlds population lives in
malaria zones
 Malaria zones are: Africa, India, Middle
East, Southeast Asia, Central and South
America, Eastern Europe, and the
South Pacific (slide 13).
History and Future Research
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One of the oldest known diseases.
King Tut died of malaria.
Malaria has been infecting humans for over 50,000 years.
References to malaria have been recorded for nearly 6000 years,
starting in China.
Used to be common in Europe and North America.
First advances in malaria were made in 1880 by a French army doctor
named Charles Laveran.
He looked into infected red blood cells and discovered the parasite was
a protist. This was the first time a protist was discovered to cause a
disease.
Carlos Finlay discovered that mosquitoes transmitted diseases.
Ronald Ross discovered that mosquitoes transmitted malaria in 1898.
First effective medicine was discovered by Pierre Pelletier and Joseph
Caventou. This medicine is called quinine, which comes from the bark
of cinchona trees in Peru.
No effective vaccine: only immunity is a result of multiple infections.
Types of Malaria
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Falciparum: Almost 80% of cases and 90% of malaria
deaths. Primarily found in South America and Africa.
Ovale: Rarest form. Found in West Africa. Can be up
to four years before and symptoms occur.
Malariae: Can infect other mammals. Found in Africa
and SE Asia.
Vivax: 20% of infections. Widest geographic
distribution.
Symptoms and Transmission
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Female Anopheles mosquito carries parasite
and transmits it to humans. Affects red blood
cells
 Not highly contagious, however, as it affects
blood cells it is possible to receive the
parasite through unclean needles.
 Can pass through a placenta to a fetus.(Slide
11).
 Symptoms: chills, fever, headache, anemia,
muscle pain, nausea, sweating and vomiting.
How Malaria Affects You
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When malaria enters the blood, the parasites
go to the liver, where they reproduce.
 After they infect the liver, they transform, and
go for red blood cells, as shown in slide 11.
 The more the parasite breaks out of blood
cells, the sicker a person gets. This is when
symptoms occur.
 The period when malaria is in the liver is
called the dormant phase.
 Falciparum malaria is the most dangerous
type of malaria, because it makes red blood
cells stick to veins, clogging them.
Treatment and Prevention
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Different medicine is needed for different types of malaria.
Important to know where the malarial zones are as shown on
slide 13
Important to know where malaria was picked up: malaria from
Africa might be resistant to medicine that malaria from South
America is not.
Primaquine is the standard medicine for malaria in the liver
Chloroquine is medicine for malaria in blood.
Some types of malaria are chloroquine resistant, so quinine is
used.
Use bug spray and mosquito nets to avoid being bitten.
Prophylaxis (prevention) and Malarone are used to reduce
chances of getting malaria.
Age
 No
age limit
 Pregnant women and children are most
likely to get it.
 People from non-malaria zones are at
much higher risk than natives when they
are in malaria zones.
Cost
 Not
expensive to treat.
 Medicine usually costs around $2.50.
 In hospital however, severe malaria can
cost much more.
 Treatment of severe malaria in a
hospital can cost up to a few hundred
dollars in developing countries;
thousands of dollars in the U.S.
Conclusion
Malaria is one of the oldest diseases
known to man. It is stoppable, yet 1 to 2
million people die of it every year. I learned
that there are several types of malaria, and it
reproduces in the liver, but affects the blood.
The thing that interested me most was how it
affects the blood and its long history. Even
though it is easy to treat, this disease has
killed millions of people.
Diagram of Malaria Infection
Infection is by mosquito bite
Infects liver, then
blood cells
Chart: Malaria Cases per 100,000 people.
Source: United Nations Development Program
Diagram: Malaria Zones
Source: United Nations Development Program
Bibliography
Beers, Fletcher, Jones et al.
The Merck Manual of Medical Information
"Malaria" p. 1140-1142
Copyright 2003, by Merck Research Laboratories
American Accreditation HealthCare Commission
"Malaria"
Copyright 2010
https://health.google.com/health/ref/Malaria
Wikipedia
"Malaria"
Last modified March 1, 2010
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malaria
National Center for Biotechnology Information
"The Malaria Burden: Economic and Social Impact"
Copyright 2004 by The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov