Malaria.com

  • Malaria Overview
  • Malaria Research
  • Malaria News
  • Malaria Videos
  • Blogs
  • Malaria Q&A
  • Ask a Doc
  • Events

Introduction of malaria

QUESTION:

What is the introduction of malaria?

ANSWER:

Malaria is introduced into the human host via mosquitoes, who pass the parasite into the human blood stream through their mouthparts as they take a blood meal. Since the development of both the mosquito and the parasite are temperature-dependent, and tend to favour warm, humid conditions (mosquito larvae require pools of still water to develop into adults), the distribution of malaria is limited to parts of the world where these temperature and humidity conditions are met.

However, cases of malaria can also be introduced into other parts of the world by travellers coming from malarial regions or by mosquitoes, already infected with malaria, being accidentally transported into non-malarial countries in aeroplanes or in ships. These kinds of introductions resulted in about 1500 cases of malaria reported in the United States in 2007, a country which is usually free of malarial transmission. These introductions are rare, and also short lived, as the conditions do not favour the continued survival of the transmission cycle. However, this is one of the worries regarding climate change; it may make some areas of the world, which currently do not have malaria, more climatically suited to transmission of the disease, thus allowing for introductions of the mosquitoes and the parasite in the future.

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Stay Informed

Tags

ACTs Africa Anopheles Artemisinin Artemisinin-based Combination Therapies atovaquone-proguanil Bednets Blood transfusion Cerebral Malaria Chloroquine Coartem congenital malaria diagnosis Doxycycline fever Lariam long-lasting insecticide treated bednets Malaria Control Malaria Diagnosis Malaria life cycle Malaria No More Malaria Prevention Malaria Symptoms Malaria transmission Malaria Treatment Malarone Mefloquine mosquito mosquitoes organ transplant Plasmodium Plasmodium Falciparum Plasmodium Knowlesi Plasmodium malariae Plasmodium Ovale Plasmodium Vivax Primaquine prophylaxis Quinine red blood cells relapse transmission treatment vector control World Health Organisation

Recent Comments

  • Santwana on What is “Pf” and “Pv” in relation to malaria?
  • Eb Friedrich on Malaria Medication Side-effects Survey: Treatment and Prophylaxis
  • Michael Madumere on Historic Malaria Video (1943)
  • dennis lungunga on Malaria Transmission Through Sexual Contact
  • flato on Where is Malaria Found?