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malaria |
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malaria![]() The life cycle of the malaria parasite is split between mosquito and human hosts. The parasites are injected into the human bloodstream by an infected Anopheles mosquito and carried to the liver. Here they attack red blood cells, and multiply asexually. The infected blood cells burst, producing spores, or merozoites, which reinfect the bloodstream. After several generations, the parasite develops into a sexual form. If the human host is bitten at this stage, the sexual form of the parasite is sucked into the mosquito's stomach. Here fertilization takes place, the zygotes formed reproduce asexually and migrate to the salivary glands ready to be injected into another human host, completing the cycle. Infectious parasitic disease of the tropics transmitted by mosquitoes, marked by periodic fever and an enlarged spleen. When a female mosquito of the Anopheles genus bites a human who has malaria, it takes in with the human blood one of four malaria protozoa of the genus Plasmodium. This matures within the insect and is then transferred when the mosquito bites a new victim. As of 2007, the World Health Organization (WHO) estimated that malaria affects more than 500 million people each year, and more than 1 million children die of the disease, most of them in sub-Saharan Africa. In 1998, the Roll Back Malaria partnership was set up as a multi-agency programme for research and control of the disease. The agencies involved include the WHO, the World Bank, the United Nations Children's Fund, and the United Nations Development Programme. The Roll Back Malaria campaign aims to halve deaths from malaria by 2010. It has already saved many lives with measures such as the distribution of bed nets treated with long-lasting insecticides.
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The effect of Plasmodium falciparum malaria on HIV-1 RNA blood plasma concentration. The use of these nets helps prevent the disease, which is particularly important due to the increase in drug-resistant falciparum malaria parasites. Rather, just as sickle trait was selected for as a defense against endemic falciparum malaria to supplement acquired immunity (probably by helping the individual stay alive long enough to acquire an effective resistance) it seems likely that the ability we can discern to survive yellow fever infection would have developed in areas of endemic yellow fever to also help the individual acquire immunity by surviving the disease. |
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