Japanese researchers may have discovered how to block an essential step in the transmission of malaria. |
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In 2004, nine people contracted typhoid and paratyphoid fever, seven picked up malaria, two people got leprosy and there was one case of cholera. |
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To measles we can add smallpox, tuberculosis, malaria, typhus, typhoid, influenza and syphilis. |
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Diseases such as tuberculosis, influenza, malaria, typhoid, and pneumonia are serious health problems. |
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Small changes in the distribution of malaria may therefore expose large numbers of people to infection. |
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Most people get malaria by being bitten by an infected female Anopheles mosquito. |
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Fever or malaria remained the second most important cause of death throughout the recall period. |
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These mutations and their impact on the epidemiology of malaria are described below. |
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Outbreaks of cholera, malaria, typhoid, leishmaniasis, meningitis, and haemorrhagic fever also recorded. |
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Adults with malaria who grew up in parts of Africa where malaria is endemic are common in our intensive care unit. |
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In tropical and sub-tropical areas, malaria is one of the world's biggest killers. |
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Imported malaria was defined as malarial infection acquired in an endemic country and treated in France. |
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About fifty years ago I was interested in the current polemic in the field of malariology the exoerythrocytic cycle of the malaria parasite. |
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Travellers who take day trips from a malaria free city to a malarious region may be at minimal risk if they return to the city before dusk. |
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Consequently malaria, diarrhoea, scabies and respiratory diseases are rife. |
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Not surprisingly, malnourishment and illness like fevers, coughs, malaria, scabies and diarrhoea are common. |
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Vaccination against hepatitis A and malaria prophylaxis, together with advice on measures to minimise the risk of exposure, are important. |
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You should also get vaccinations for typhoid, hepatitis A, polio, malaria and diphtheria. |
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To date, only DNA vaccines against hepatitis B and malaria have induced immune responses thought to be protective in humans. |
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They were liable to pneumonia, respiratory, and tubercular diseases but were comparatively exempt from malaria, diphtheria, and scarlatina. |
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Mention the word malaria or Dengue fever and the knee-jerk reaction is to fog and spray the entire area with deadly poisons. |
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Burmese Rohingya wait in a crowded room for malaria test results at special clinic for malaria on May 4, 2009 in Sittwe, Arakan state, Myanmar. |
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Prevalent tropical diseases are malaria, schistosomiasis, and river blindness, especially in the south. |
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The nematode is clustered with the acellular slime mold, the cellular slime mold, the malaria parasite, and the dysentery amoeba. |
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Higher temperatures will mean increased incidences of vector-borne diseases like malaria, dengue and measles. |
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The volunteer doctors there are stretched to capacity and are too few, especially at the height of malaria season. |
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A warming climate will increase the range and incidence of tropical diseases such as malaria and tick-borne encephalitis. |
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I carry a few pills to deal with malaria, and a change of clothing, and that's about it. |
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It is boosting production of its malaria drug in line with sharply increased demand. |
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The troops suffered from malaria, dengue fever, beriberi, hookworm and pellagra. |
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Diseases such as beriberi and malaria have become more common as problems with sanitation have increased. |
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The biggest health problems are tuberculosis, venereal diseases, malaria, trachoma, typhoid fever, and dysentery. |
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They may reason that they are more likely to die from malaria or be bitten by a snake well before then. |
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It conducted important research on such endemic parasitical diseases as hookworm, malaria, and yellow fever. |
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Some camps will become unreachable, and there will be an increased possibility of malaria and cholera outbreaks. |
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More than 33,000 cases of cholera have been reported, while malaria, anaemia and bilharzia have ravaged the population over the last few months. |
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As in other parts of Zambia, tropical diseases such as malaria, bilharzia, and intestinal worms are quite common among the group. |
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Malnutrition is common, making it possible for tropical diseases such as malaria and bilharzia to spread. |
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The urban propensity to dress babies with fancy clothes makes them more vulnerable to malaria. |
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The malaria parasite has a complex life cycle and spends part of it in red blood cells. |
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There are good reasons to believe a vaccine is possible, for the simple reason that we do observe that people can develop immunity to malaria. |
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He ordered the nearby swamps and marshes in the city of Salinus to be drained, in order to prevent an unknown pestilence, probably malaria. |
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How people use their environments has profoundly affected diseases like malaria and trypanosomiasis. |
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The four-year-old was carried into the hospital in a deep coma, with a high temperature and a high level of malaria parasite in his bloodstream. |
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When he suddenly dies from blackwater fever, a potent form of malaria, his devastated friend goes it alone. |
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Many traveler's diseases are a nuisance like Montezuma's revenge, but some can be fatal, such as malaria, yellow fever, AIDS, and meningitis. |
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The algorithm used by the strategy may result in overclassification of fever as malaria and hence overuse of antimalarials. |
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Quinine is a natural extract of the cinchona tree, and was used to treat malaria. |
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He was impressed with cinchona, the South American tree bark that was the first effective treatment for malaria. |
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It also identifies areas in which malaria is not prevalent to prevent unnecessary use of antimalarial medications. |
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Poor adherence with antimalarial drug regimens is well documented in travelers who contract malaria. |
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In the 19th century, doctors prescribed whisky or brandy for all kinds of fevers, from influenza and pneumonia to malaria, typhus and cholera. |
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Common scourges found in the desert include plague, typhus, malaria, dengue fever, dysentery, cholera, and typhoid. |
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The pesticide kills mosquitoes, the blood-sucking pests that spread malaria. |
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They share their environment with the mosquitoes who act as vectors for malaria. |
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This deadly form of malaria is caused by a single cell organism which is transmitted by mosquito bite. |
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The choice is between buying a mosquito net to cover your children while they sleep, and having your children die slowly of malaria. |
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In numerous cases, men first diagnosed with malaria or typhoid were later classified with diarrhea or dysentery. |
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Therefore, it is mandatory to establish an effective technique for screening blood donors for the malaria parasite. |
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The children suffered from eye strain, headaches, leg and shoulder pain, malaria, discoloration of hair, rotten teeth and dysentery. |
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As the tankers dug in, dengue fever, malaria, diarrhea, and dysentery afflicted many of the soldiers. |
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We had a fright six months ago, when we thought he had cancer, but it turned out to be a rare doggy form of malaria he'd picked up in France. |
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Already there are fears that climate change will push malaria carrying mosquitoes even further afield. |
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More money would help agencies such as the World Health Organisation to expand the use of non-chemical measures against malaria. |
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In February 1878 Pius IX died but one month after allowing Victor Emanuel II to receive the viaticum during the king's final bout with malaria. |
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However, many people who live in areas where malaria is common get repeated infections and never really recover in between episodes of illness. |
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It's a topical microbicide and we found that it inhibited malaria and toxoplasma. |
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Then a civil war in 1994 brought an influx of lowlanders with malaria to Karuzi. |
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Mosquitoes spread about four million malaria cases, causing about one million deaths globally each year. |
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I had malaria 46 times during captivity, although luckily not while I was in the cage. |
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Remember that the preventative drugs for malaria need to be continued for one month after leaving the malarial region. |
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He was a specialist adviser to the malaria consortium programme to promote malaria control strategies. |
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A number of serious diseases afflict the population, including malaria, tuberculosis, and cholera. |
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All four forms of malaria debilitate the patient by destroying human hemoglobin and are characterized by a cycle of fever, chills, and sweating. |
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In recent years, there has been increased use of dipstick tests for rapid screening and diagnosis of acute malaria in rural endemic areas. |
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If clinicians are unsure of the diagnosis in a patient with severe febrile illness, it is reasonable to treat for malaria. |
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More than a third of the population suffer from a virulent strain of malaria, so consult your doctor about effective prophylactics. |
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Infections with Plasmodium falciparum, the most virulent human malaria parasite, cause more than one million deaths per year. |
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It reviews key risk factors for malaria acquisition, measures to prevent mosquito bites, and drugs approved for chemoprophylaxis. |
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Individuals with normal and heterozygous genotypes are both infected by falciparum that causes malaria fever. |
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The cheapest antimalarial drug, chloroquine, is rapidly losing its effectiveness in almost all countries where malaria is endemic. |
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You do hear about outbreaks of things like cholera and dysentery as well as malaria. |
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The role of global environmental change on diseases such as malaria, dengue fever, and cholera has been well documented. |
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Many of these regions also suffer from epidemics of other infectious diseases such as cholera and malaria. |
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The flood victims face the danger of epidemics of cholera, dysentery, malaria and other diseases. |
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There's a lot of disease raging across the board from cholera to malaria to measles. |
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The International Red Cross, said it was concerned about waterborne diseases like malaria and cholera. |
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These typically include malnutrition, anaemia, malaria parasitaemia, or HIV infection. |
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In the mid-seventeenth century, Spain began to import the bitter bark of cinchona trees from Peru and Ecuador as an antidote for malaria. |
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Each strain carried a form of the gene for a surface protein from the deadliest malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum. |
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It is also highly recommended that people take prophylactics against malaria. |
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You'll need hepatitis and typhus shots, and you'll need to take malaria prophylactics while there. |
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But they have eye infections and all the other health risks associated with dirty water such as malaria and intestinal worms. |
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After the Second World War, Europe and North America used DDT to eradicate malaria. |
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Later, Chinese funding of malaria research at the institute gave a further push. |
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Variously known an 'intermittent fever' or 'ague,' malaria had been endemic in the marshy, fenny lowlands of Europe and Africa for millennia. |
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Others die as the result of completely avoidable diseases such as malaria and diarrhoea. |
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More heat will also mean the spread of water-borne diseases such as malaria. |
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We found limited evidence linking number of mosquito bites and risk of malaria. |
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Fixed dose drugs have proved successful in treating malaria and tuberculosis. |
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Tony Campolo said that response is like trying to get rid of malaria by killing mosquitoes. |
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With thousands of bodies lying on streets there was a risk of malaria and dengue fever. |
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The result of this was a significant increase in cases of malaria and dengue fever. |
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The threats of malaria and diarrhoeal diseases will only further increase with the onset of rains. |
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Preventable diseases such as malaria and diarrhea and cholera are a major killer. |
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The majority of the people she sees are suffering from malaria, tuberculosis and skin diseases. |
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It has been known for some time that some mosquitoes transmit malaria, while others do not. |
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Tuberculosis and malaria are the two major causes of illness and death in the nation. |
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The purpose of travel to malarious areas was reported for 495 U.S. civilians with imported malaria. |
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The most deadly form of malaria is caused by the parasite plasmodium falciparum, which kills one child every 20 seconds. |
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Coluzzi's research indicates that the most serious type of malaria reached Rome at about the time of Christ. |
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The standard microscopic examination technique for malaria parasites enables the detection of all four human plasmodium species. |
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Diseases such as malaria were endemic, while blackwater fever, dengue fever, dysentery, yaws, and hookworms were a constant scourge. |
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Vaccinations are available to people travelling to areas where they may be exposed to serious diseases such as malaria, typhoid or yellow fever. |
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They are the menace of summer, spreading malaria, yellow fever, encephalitis and West Nile Virus. |
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Infections like dengue and malaria, therefore, proliferate solely where environmental conditions are suitable. |
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Rain pits can lead to spreading of diseases such as dengue fever and malaria. |
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Diseases like malaria, dengue fever and cholera can spread quickly especially in temperatures over 30 degrees. |
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Health and education facilities are minimal and diseases such as malaria, dengue fever and tuberculosis are common. |
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The aim of disease carrier control is to minimise the transmission of malaria, dengue fever and any other communicable disease spread by insects. |
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Standing water from the flooding can attract mosquitoes, spawning outbreaks of malaria and dengue fever. |
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The people who are most vociferous in this debate are simply not familiar with the epidemiology of diseases like malaria and dengue. |
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The parasite continuously mutates, making itself resistant to malaria drugs. |
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The perils of battle apart, both sides suffered from malaria, malnutrition and inadequate supplies. |
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Malnutrition and tropical diseases such as malaria, schistosomiasis, and sleeping sickness are widespread. |
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Advances in this area, especially against malaria and schistosomiasis, are not yet conclusive, but give cause for more optimism than before. |
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I have heard him lecture on malaria, septic shock, the medical significance of tattoos and the art of memoir writing. |
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They also provide breeding grounds for the carriers of diseases such as malaria and bilharzia. |
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How can we expect a man or a woman to do a full day's work if he or she is riddled with malaria, bilharzia or hookworm? |
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Some of the most common diseases are malaria, bilharzia, sexually transmitted diseases, tetanus, cholera, polio, and typhoid. |
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The vast coastal swamps caused by centuries of deforestation made malaria endemic in many parts of central and southern Italy. |
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A separate combination, atovaquone plus proguanil, is active against malaria around the world. |
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Patients with severe falciparum malaria are acidotic and compensate by hyperventilation. |
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Take, for example, malaria, which involves infection by a parasite transmitted by mosquitoes. |
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Around 40 per cent of the world's population is at risk from malaria transmitted by mosquitoes. |
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Doctors treat malaria by using anti-malarial drugs, such as chloroquine or quinine. |
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The two most important groups of drugs for malaria treatment are still based on quinine or artemisinin. |
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She had the respiratory distress and metabolic acidosis of severe malaria, and needed blood urgently. |
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Epidemics such as malaria, Dengue fever, Weil's disease, etc. continue to claim several lives every year. |
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Control of malaria and anaemia depends largely on passive case detection and appropriate treatment. |
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In Sri Lanka, more children die of work-exposure to pesticides than die of a combination of malaria, whooping cough and other childhood diseases. |
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For treatment of malaria, several drugs exist and a few are relatively inexpensive. |
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They were carried off by malaria, cholera, typhus, heat stroke, agues and tropical distempers, and drink, lots of drink. |
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Then they died of typhoid, malaria and liver ailments in addition to starvation. |
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However, Baganda suffer from malaria, and children are frequently afflicted with kwashiorkor, a form of protein-calorie malnutrition. |
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They had taken chloroquine weekly and proguanil daily for chemoprophylaxis against malaria. |
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By comparison, six out of seven unvaccinated animals had to be treated for virulent malaria. |
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This was the era of plague, typhus, malaria, high infant and maternal mortality, and low life expectancy. |
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Instead they can look forward to suntans, palm trees, olive groves, melanoma and malaria. |
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Also, you have to look into diseases like malaria, dengue fever, yellow fever, and typhoid. |
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There is no malaria in Seychelles, and yellow fever and other tropical diseases are not a problem either. |
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From dengue fever to malaria to yellow fever, this insect spreads more human illnesses than any other. |
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Malnutrition and tropical diseases, such as yellow fever and malaria, are serious problems. |
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In Liberia, the major health issue is infectious diseases, including yellow fever, cholera, typhoid, polio and malaria. |
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But vaccination against deadly diseases such as yellow fever and malaria is essential. |
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The famous seven hills of Rome were healthy because mosquitoes, the vectors of malaria, only fly at low altitudes. |
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The proportion of patients using traditional herbal remedies for malaria varies widely. |
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A Kendal nurse is learning to treat snakebites and avoid malaria as part of his preparation for a trip to the steamy jungles of South-East Asia. |
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Early successes in some areas were dramatic, and by the early 1960s malaria was reduced to very low levels in certain countries. |
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The researchers used the fruit fly model to discover the way most mosquitoes resist malaria infection. |
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Multidrug resistant malaria is not yet a major problem in east and central Africa. |
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Transfusion-induced malaria continues its resurgence throughout much of the tropics and subtropics. |
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Among a dozen mosquito types in Milan, experts are keeping a close eye out for the anopheles mosquito which is capable of transmitting malaria. |
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Of the thousands of mosquito types, only the genus anopheles transmits malaria to humans. |
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Infections such as typhoid, malaria and even leprosy were among the illnesses people picked up while on holiday. |
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Cholera, plague, smallpox, malaria, kalaazar, leprosy and venereal diseases are the others considered. |
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Ninety per cent of travellers who contract malaria do not become ill until after they return home. |
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Your destination may carry a risk of a contractable disease such as malaria, typhoid, cholera or even rabies. |
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Just as important as malaria prophylaxis is avoiding mosquito bites with insect repellents, impregnated mosquito nets, and suitable clothing. |
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The country has made headlines lately with the resurgence of preventable diseases such as plague, malaria, dengue fever and tuberculosis. |
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Improving adherence to use of antimosquito measures and antimalarial medications could prevent many cases of malaria. |
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Fourthly, the health facility was assessed for availability of antimalarial drugs and malaria treatment wall charts. |
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First he went down with malaria, but later on due to lack of food his legs started swelling up. |
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Conventional treatment for severe malaria in Africa is intravenous or intramuscular quinine. |
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Some common ailments affecting the Congolese include malaria, parasites, tuberculosis, schistosomiasis, diarrhea, AIDS, and malnutrition. |
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The main health threats are sleeping sickness, transmitted by the tsetse fly, and malaria. |
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There are few medicines used to treat diseases like malaria, tuberculosis and polio that have patents on them now. |
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He said nanomachines could eventually be used to cure diseases such as tuberculosis and malaria. |
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The loss of the plant led to thousands of children dying from malaria, tuberculosis and other treatable diseases. |
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Conditions were primitive and patients arrived suffering from malaria, crocodile or snake bites, or burns from open cooking fires. |
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They taught me about hepatitis, malaria, ringworm and how Edward Jenner discovered the cure to small pox while working with milkmaids. |
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Idaho, and probably most other states, still have mosquitoes capable of carrying malaria. |
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The malaria parasite has to be able to reproduce in the mosquito in order to be able to infect humans. |
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Insecticides kill insect defoliators and vectors of deadly human diseases such as malaria, yellow fever, plague, and typhus. |
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One swallow does not make a summer, but one tophus makes gout and one crescent malaria. |
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About 30 to 50 per cent of Solomon Islanders have malaria, which makes the risk of cross-infection via mosquito bites very possible. |
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Pigs in particular create breeding grounds for mosquitoes, which carry avian pox and malaria. |
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The research identified seven cases of malaria transmitted in this way, which was probably an underestimate. |
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They married in 1918, after MacDiarmid was invalided out of the army with cerebral malaria. |
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Mosquitoes can carry the malaria parasite or West Nile virus, and deer ticks may carry the bacterium that causes Lyme disease. |
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The case was diagnosed as visceral leishmaniasis with leishmania lymphadenitis and coexistent falciparum malaria. |
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The academic literature on DDT and malaria doesn't suggest that DDT is the anti-malaria silver bullet that some people make it out to be. |
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This is aggravating an already festering situation produced by outbreaks of malaria, dengue fever, hepatitis-A, leptospirosis, cholera and other diarrheal diseases. |
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The variant of malaria prevalent in Northern malarial zones like the Po Valley was enfeebling, but not lethal. |
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Benign tertian malaria may not be seen until several years after arrival. |
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In East Timor he has had to help treat a range of injuries including vehicle accident victims, sufferers of cerebral malaria and even a local gored by a bull. |
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Although he used the term ague, true malaria cannot necessarily be inferred because ague included any number of short-lived illnesses with chills and fever. |
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That a common antibiotic, doxycycline, used to treat malaria, acne, and other infections could cause increased intracranial pressure is not a recent revelation. |
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The medical aid agency specifically asked them for the overall resources devoted to malaria, tuberculosis, sleeping sickness, Chagas' disease, and leishmaniasis. |
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A vaccine for malaria or Aids would be a longer time coming without them. |
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In Kapit, Malaysia, recent cases of malaria were diagnosed as Plasmodium knowlesi, a malarian parasite that usually infects long and pig-tailed macaques. |
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All were covered with insect bites, were underfed, and three had malaria. |
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Inside the hospital, he was injected with malaria medication using unsterilized needles. |
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Modern medicine categorizes diarrhea as a symptom of a disease, such as scurvy, typhoid, malaria, and dysentery, or as a symptom of indigestible substances in the intestines. |
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In sub-Saharan Africa, 400,000 to 500,000 people are at risk of contracting malaria. |
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For the past five years, however, malaria has reinvaded a broad swath from Asia to the Americas, with rare occurrences even reported in the United States. |
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Today, both chloroquine and Atabrine are used to prevent malaria. |
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Eight of the students had to be evacuated out of the country when they contracted diseases such as dengue fever and malaria. |
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Deforestation and other radical ecosystem alterations also promote diseases, such as malaria and cholera, as well as new strains of existing contagions. |
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The entire population of 500,000 suffered from malaria, and the only functioning hotel in the country was a former Spanish Mediterranean ferry boat moored in the harbour. |
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With less than a dozen toilets in the entire community, poor sanitation fuels high rates of malaria and lethal cases of diarrhea. |
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It was not just the developing countries with their large populations and lack of adequate sanitation that wanted a solution to the problem of malaria. |
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If you travel to an area of the world that has a high risk for malaria, you can also install window screens, use insect repellents, and place mosquito netting over beds. |
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The troops, already debilitated by the impure drinking water and hunger on the long, hot march from Batesville, were quickly overcome with malaria, as had been predicted. |
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These programmes included an educational component relating to nutrition, prevention of disease, and early treatment of febrile illnesses such as malaria. |
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However, her medical records indicate that she has bronchitis, TB, bilharzia, malaria, juvenile rheumatoid arthritis and multiple coughs and colds, all due to sickle cell. |
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Combined with a shortage of food and medicine these conditions create the potential for epidemics of cholera, malaria, dengue fever and diarrhoea. |
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Malaria is an important environmental factor which reduces fetal growth in primiparae more than multiparae living under holoendemic conditions for malaria. |
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Mefloquine is commonly prescribed to prevent malaria in travelers and has replaced other drugs because Plasmodium falciparum is commonly resistant to them. |
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Kids suffering from malaria or extreme diarrhea are now too often left without medical care. |
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Others carry deadly diseases like malaria, encephalitis and yellow fever. |
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Lassa fever presents with symptoms and signs indistinguishable from those of febrile illnesses such as malaria and other viral haemorrhagic fevers such as Ebola. |
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Mercury, a purgative to clean the system, and quinine, to treat fever, can cause malaria and typhus sufferers to have symptoms that mimic typhoid and dysentery. |
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She traveled to South Africa as a rotary International Youth Ambassador and contracted malaria. |
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For example, herbalists claimed that Peruvian bark cured malaria. |
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A shocking statistic among many is that, on average, one person dies of malaria there every 30 seconds. |
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Water-related diseases cause 80 percent of all the world's sicknesses, in the forms of hepatitis A, malaria, diarrhea, dysentery and schistosomiasis. |
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They range in size from single cells, like the malaria parasite, to tapeworms which may reach thirty feet in length and hence are not microscopic at all! |
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My hopes for an easy way out quickly vanished when he launched into a list that included hepatitis A, hepatitis B, cholera, tetanus, typhoid, polio, meningitis and malaria. |
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Quinine, as well as being used as a prophylactic against malaria, was also considered to be an appetite stimulant and a more general antidote to fever. |
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The daily anti-malarial pill ensured that if one did get malaria, at least it was controllable and did not usually develop into either cerebral malaria or blackwater fever. |
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Indeed, malaria figured heavily in the Revolutionary War and may have helped defeat the Redcoats. |
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It is used to treat fevers, coughs, prolonged fevers, colds influenza, asthma, hepatitis, malaria, jaundice, cholecystitis, amenorrhea, low energy with digestive weakness. |
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Although the four as listed above cause malaria when injected into the human body, plasmodium falciparum has a capacity to cause severe or complicated malarial disease. |
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Lice, malaria, ringworm, typhoid, and dysentery were rampant. |
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People with two copies of a form of a particular gene develop sickle-cell anemia, but people with one copy of that form show high resistance to malaria. |
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Siti said babies and children were most vulnerable to lung infections, malaria, diarrheal diseases, cholera and measles, which usually emerge after floods. |
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Yet, while onchocerciasis eradication is a success and children born in the 1990s have no risk of river blindness, malaria is still a problem in developing countries. |
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It is also used as a mosquito repellant, a significant contribution in a region where the resurgence of malaria is responsible for thousands of deaths. |
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The quinine-laced tonic water was proscribed as a malaria preventive, and the ingenious troops found adding gin made the nasty stuff slide right down. |
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Whether artemisinins given by any route should be replacing quinine as the initial treatment of choice for severe malaria in Africa remains an open question. |
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One of the gold standard therapies for a long time was a drug called quinine, and that was a medication that was used for prophylaxis against malaria. |
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Molecular methods have been developed to monitor these mutations in the field isolates so as to evaluate the efficacy of sulpha drugs to treat malaria. |
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During an archaeological dig in the 1970s, instructions for treating malaria with an herb called wormwood, or artemisia, were found in a 2,000-year-old Chinese tomb. |
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Parts of the malaria and leishmania parasite genomes are also known. |
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It occupies a wide-range of ecological niches throughout the Afrotropical region, is highly anthropophilic, and is susceptible to the human malaria parasites. |
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As municipal water and sewer systems replaced backyard wells, cesspools, and privies, outbreaks of cholera, typhoid fever, dysentery, malaria, and typhus diminished. |
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Firstly, because the level of parasitaemia in malaria varies from hour to hour, blood should have been examined several times a day for two or three days. |
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Results of quantitative buffy coat analysis were positive for malaria trophozoites, schizonts, and gametocytes. |
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Altitudinal changes in malaria incidence in highlands of Ethiopia and Colombia. |
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A tyrosine metabolite and two ketoacids were detected at increased concentrations in patients with severe malaria. |
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Antimalarial drug resistance is thus identified as one of the major causative phenomena hindering malaria control. |
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Thus, a complex of antimalarial activities allowed to interrupt local transmission of malaria within the country. |
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The importance of Anopheles dirus as a vector of malaria in northeast India. |
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Sanaria's mission is to develop and commercialize live, whole sporozoite vaccines against malaria. |
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Again, additional resources were made available for malaria control, this time to the Lebowa government. |
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Decorticate, decerebrate and opisthotonic posturing and seizures in Kenyan children with cerebral malaria. |
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The distribution of CHQ within human blood is also important because the malaria parasite is intraerythrocytic during schizogony. |
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Mapping a quantitative trait locus involved in melanotic encapsulation of foreign bodies in the malaria vector, Anopheles gambiae. |
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Some MRDTs detect the presence of aldolase, which is not species specific but rather is found in all malaria species. |
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They exit the liver as merozoites, which invade red blood cells and trigger malaria symptoms. |
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The surface of invasive merozoites has been one of the major targets for research to develop an effective malaria vaccine. |
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Thrombospondin binds falciparum malaria parasitized erythrocytes and may mediate cytoadherence. |
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The incidence of malaria in pregnancy was found to be more in primigravida and second gravida as compared to multigravida. |
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Please note that this table does not include all possible interactions with malaria chemoprophylactic drugs. |
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Experimental rural malaria control measures in North Kanara district, Bombay Presidency. |
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She says the nurses have done some tests and say her daughter has malaria. |
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Splenic infarctions in mixed infection with kala-azar and falciparum malaria. |
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He said diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, and leishmaniosis are endemic in Yanomami communities. |
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Tu discovered artemisinin, a drug that has helped significantly reduce the mortality rates of malaria patients. |
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Dried whole-plant Artemisa annua slows evolution of malaria drug resistance and overcomes resistance to artemisinin. |
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Survey for asymptomatic malaria cases in low transmission settings of Iran under elimination programme. |
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All of us took daily doses of Atabrine to ward off malaria and it worked as long as we continued taking the medicine. |
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A few doors down, a funeral was beginning for Denize Angweta, a 10-month-old baby who had just died of malaria. |
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The school's scientists also developed the first drug to treat malaria and pioneered treatments for sleeping sickness and relapsing fever. |
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The pediatric death toll due to diarrheal illnesses exceeds that of AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria combined. |
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By VJ Day, when the men were liberated, Jack was suffering from recurring malaria, beriberi and Blackwater fever. |
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The second speculates that artemisinin is uniquely activated by haem in malaria vacuoles. |
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Randomized controlled trial of levamisole hydrochloride as adjunctive therapy in severe falciparum malaria with high parasitemia. |
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In all areas where malaria is endemic, at least one in four pregnant women has evidence of peripheral or placental malaria at delivery. |
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In June 2011, reports were received of an outbreak of a new drug-resistant form of malaria in southwest Brazzaville. |
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Cerebral malaria is associated with neurological sequelae in some survivors, especially in children. |
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Surveillance of the efficacy of artesunate and mefloquine combination for the treatment of uncomplicated falciparum malaria in Cambodia. |
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Both studies outlined serious adverse outcomes associated with malaria by parasite species during pregnancy. |
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Given its apparent success in treating dementia paralytica, a few clinicians went on to test the malaria pyrotherapy on schizophrenia patients. |
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If the Japanese didn't get you, the insects or the monsoon would, as I got malaria and sand fly fever, but I survived. |
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The bionomics, population structure and the role of malaria transmission of vectors in Mozambique and Angola. |
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Monocytes and neutrophils may ingest birefringent depolarizing malaria pigment that can be detected by the instrument. |
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And while we're on the subject, what if global warming enables the malaria mosquito to reach our shores? |
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Anopheles minimus was recorded in this district after a period of about 45 years of launching the malaria eradication programme. |
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Duration of Plasmodium sporogony and gonotrophic cycle of the vector is reduced that increases the risk of malaria transmission. |
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Also useful for introduction in clearweed grown stagnant waters for malaria vector control. |
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Up to and including WWII troops based in mosquito-infested areas were given daily doses of Mepacrine to combat malaria. |
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These include diseases such as malaria, such as undernutrition, and such as water borne diseases, diarrhoea and other water borne diseases. |
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Active participation of field workers, supervisors and cooperation of corporators plays a vital role in controlling malaria. |
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Examples include filariasis, malaria, trypanosomiasis, cysticercosis, schistosomiasis, and intestinal parasites. |
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This theory is supported by the rise of malaria in countries where rice has been dehusked and the thiamine-rich outer coating is discarded. |
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Changes in optic nerve head blood flow in children with cerebral malaria and acute papilloedema. |
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New emerging Plasmodium falciparum genotypes in children during the transition phase from asymptomatic parasitemia to malaria. |
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Third, malaria parasitemia can occur that is not the cause of the febrile illness. |
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