Literature DB >> 11425172

The ears of the hippopotamus: manifestations, determinants, and estimates of the malaria burden.

J G Breman1.   

Abstract

Malarious patients experience asymptomatic parasitemia; acute febrile illness (with cerebral damage, anemia, respiratory distress, hypoglycemia); chronic debilitation (anemia, malnutrition, nervous system-related sequelae); and complications of pregnancy (anemia, low birth weight, increased infant mortality). These manifestations in patients, communities, and countries reflect intrinsic (human, parasite, mosquito) and extrinsic (environmental, social, behavioral, political, and economic conditions as well as disease-control efforts) determinants. At a minimum, between 700,000 and 2.7 million persons die yearly from malaria, over 75% of them African children. Between 400 and 900 million acute febrile episodes occur yearly in African children under 5 yr of age living in endemic areas. Although about half of these children are parasitemic, all merit consideration of malaria-specific therapy, which is becoming more problematic because of parasite resistance to drugs. These numbers will more than double over the next 20 yr without effective control. Fewer than 20% of these febrile episodes and deaths come to the attention of any formal health system. The relatively few ill patients who have any contact with the health services represent the "ears of the hippopotamus." Greatly intensified research activities and control of the intolerable burden of malaria are mandatory if economic development is to accelerate in Africa. In particular, support should be targeted to understanding and preventing malaria-induced anemia, hypoglycemia, effects on pregnancy, and neurologic and developmental impairment. To decrease and stop transmission of this intolerable scourge, there is an urgent need for malaria vaccines, newer drugs, and better vector control methods as well as the ability to improve current technologies and use them more efficiently.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11425172     DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.2001.64.1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Trop Med Hyg        ISSN: 0002-9637            Impact factor:   2.345


  228 in total

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Authors:  Puran S Sijwali; Kentaro Kato; Karl B Seydel; Jiri Gut; Julie Lehman; Michael Klemba; Daniel E Goldberg; Louis H Miller; Philip J Rosenthal
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6.  The educative impact of health care treatment on malarial prevention behavior for the poor in Guinea, West Africa.

Authors:  Daniel L McFadden; Vasu Sunkara
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Authors:  Joseph R Fauver; Alex Gendernalik; James Weger-Lucarelli; Nathan D Grubaugh; Doug E Brackney; Brian D Foy; Gregory D Ebel
Journal:  Am J Trop Med Hyg       Date:  2017-07-19       Impact factor: 2.345

8.  Biological nanopesticides: a greener approach towards the mosquito vector control.

Authors:  Prabhakar Mishra; Brij Kishore Tyagi; Natarajan Chandrasekaran; Amitava Mukherjee
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9.  A complement receptor-1 polymorphism with high frequency in malaria endemic regions of Asia but not Africa.

Authors:  B N Thomas; B Donvito; I Cockburn; T Fandeur; J A Rowe; J H M Cohen; J M Moulds
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10.  Critical role of amino acid 23 in mediating activity and specificity of vinckepain-2, a papain-family cysteine protease of rodent malaria parasites.

Authors:  Ajay Singh; Bhaskar R Shenai; Youngchool Choe; Jiri Gut; Puran S Sijwali; Charles S Craik; Philip J Rosenthal
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  2002-11-15       Impact factor: 3.857

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