Literature DB >> 1616392

Evaluation of the relative efficacy of various antimalarial drugs in Nigerian children under five years of age suffering from acute uncomplicated falciparum malaria.

A Sowunmi1, L A Salako.   

Abstract

A parallel group-randomized comparison of the therapeutic efficacy of chloroquine (CQ), amodiaquine (AM), quinine (QN), sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine (S-P), mefloquine 15 mg kg-1 (M15) and mefloquine 25 mg kg-1 (M25) in acute symptomatic uncomplicated falciparum malaria was carried out in 325 children under the age of five years in Ibadan, southwestern Nigeria, using the 28-day in vivo test. The parasitological cure rate, assessed only up to day 14, was 85% in the CQ group and 100% in the other groups. The mean parasite and fever clearance times were, respectively, 2.64 and 1.20 days in the CQ-sensitive subgroup, 2.32 and 1.13 days in the AM group, 2.27 and 1.17 days in the QN group, 2.23 and 1.76 days in the S-P group, 2.13 and 1.10 days in the M15 group, and 2.07 and 1.09 days in the M25 group. The CQ-treatment failures (seven of 46 patients) were successfully treated with 25 mg kg-1 mefloquine, with parasite and fever clearance times of 1.73 and 1.0 days respectively. The study shows that, in Nigeria, CQ is now less effective than AM, S-P, QN and M in acute falciparum malaria in the group most vulnerable to the infection (the under-five-year-olds).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1616392     DOI: 10.1080/00034983.1992.11812625

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Trop Med Parasitol        ISSN: 0003-4983


  7 in total

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2.  Effect of dose size on the pharmacokinetics of orally administered quinine.

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Review 6.  Use of mefloquine in children - a review of dosage, pharmacokinetics and tolerability data.

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7.  Potential contribution of prescription practices to the emergence and spread of chloroquine resistance in south-west Nigeria: caution in the use of artemisinin combination therapy.

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  7 in total

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