Beta
77777

AN OVERVIEW ON MALARIA IN SUB-SAHARAN WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO TANZANIA

Article

Last updated: 25 Dec 2024

Subjects

-

Tags

-

Abstract

Malaria is Anopheles-borne protozoan disease of worldwide distribution. Infection may result in a wide variety of symptoms, ranging from absent or very mild symptoms to severe disease and even death. Malaria can be categorized as uncomplicated or severe. It is a curable disease if diagnosed and treated promptly and correctly. All the clinical symptoms associated with malaria are caused by the asexual erythrocytic or blood stage parasites. When the parasite develops in
the erythrocyte, numerous known and unknown waste substances such as hemozoin pigment and other toxic factors accumulate in the infected red blood cell. These are dumped into the bloodstream when the infected cells lyse and release invasive merozoites. The hemozoin and other toxic factors such as glucose phosphate isomerase (GPI) stimulate macrophages and other cells to produce cytokines and other soluble factors which act to produce fever and rigors and probably influence other severe pathophysiology associated with malaria. After infective bite by Anopheles-vector, a period of time (incubation period) goes by before the first symptoms appear. Incubation period in most cases varies from 7 to 30 days. The shorter periods are most frequently with P. falciparum and the longer ones with P. malariae. Antimalarial drugs taken for prophylaxis by travelers can delay the appearance of malaria symptoms by weeks or months, long after the traveler has left the malaria-endemic area. This can happen particularly with P. vivax and P. ovale, both of which can produce dormant liver stage parasites; the liver stages may reactivate and cause disease months after the infective mosquito bite. Besides, malaria-co-infection with HIV/AIDS and others is another serious issue.

DOI

10.21608/jesp.2017.77777

Keywords

Africa, Sub-Sahara, Malaria, Tanzania

Authors

First Name

MAHFOUZ

Last Name

AL-AGROUDI

MiddleName

AHMAD

Affiliation

Military Medical Academy, Egypt.

Email

-

City

-

Orcid

-

First Name

LAILA

Last Name

MEGAHED

MiddleName

ABD EL-MAWLA

Affiliation

Military Medical Academy, Egypt.

Email

-

City

-

Orcid

-

First Name

LAWRENCE

Last Name

BANDA

MiddleName

TIA

Affiliation

Tanzania People's Defence Forces.

Email

-

City

-

Orcid

-

First Name

TOSSON

Last Name

MORSY

MiddleName

ALY

Affiliation

Department of Parasitology, Faculty of Medicine, Ain Shams University, Cairo 11566, Egypt.

Email

-

City

-

Orcid

-

Volume

47

Article Issue

2

Related Issue

11619

Issue Date

2017-08-01

Receive Date

2020-03-17

Publish Date

2017-08-01

Page Start

273

Page End

292

Print ISSN

1110-0583

Online ISSN

2090-2549

Link

https://jesp.journals.ekb.eg/article_77777.html

Detail API

https://jesp.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=77777

Order

5

Type

Original Article

Type Code

1,127

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Journal of the Egyptian Society of Parasitology

Publication Link

https://jesp.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

AN OVERVIEW ON MALARIA IN SUB-SAHARAN WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO TANZANIA

Details

Type

Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023