Malaria Cure

QUESTION

What is the cure for malaria?

ANSWER

Malaria can be cured with a number of different medications, depending on then type of malaria and how far the disease has been progressed.

For standard, non-complicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria, the World Health Organisation recommends use of artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs), such as Coartem. This is due to increasing levels of resistance to chloroquine in many parts of the world. Indeed, even though chloroquine is still used in many places as first-line treatment against P. vivax, P. malariae, P. ovale and P. knowlesi uncomplicated malaria, there is some evidence that resistance to this treatment is also emerging, for example in P. vivax in parts of south-east Asia.

In cases where malaria infection has progressed to a stage where oral administration of medication is not possible, or where cerebral symptoms are suspected, the usual treatment option is intravenous quinine.

In addition, P. vivax and P. ovale malaria parasites are able to produce forms (called hypnozoites) which can become dormant in liver hepatocyte cells after the blood stages of the infection have been cleared. These dormant forms can become reactivated weeks or even months or years after the initial infection, which is called a “relapse” of the infection. One drug, called primaquine, is able to kill these liver stages, and so patients with either of these types of malaria should also discuss the possibility of taking primaquine.

Apart from these first-line treatments, there are other medications which are used against malaria, both prophylactically as well as for treatment. These include orally-administered quinine, pyrimethamine, mefloquine, proguanil, atovaquone and sulfonamides.

For more information, see the WHO recommendations for malaria treatment.


Child with Fever – Malaria Symptoms?

QUESTION

Three yrs old boy having fever every 20 days for past 5 times. Remains for 2-3 days. Can it be malaria?
Never got blood tested.

ANSWER

Recurrence of malaria every 20 days is not that common, but could be caused by two different events: (1) true relapse, whereby the boy is infected with either Plasmosium vivax or Plasmodium ovale, and the parasite is disappearing from his blood but re-emerging from dormant forms in the liver (called hypnozoites), or (2) what is known as recrudescence, whereby the parasite never disappears fully from the blood, but reduced enough to stop symptoms from being felt, then flares up again.

Both options can be treated, but require a blood test, to ensure that malaria is the correct diagnosis and also to distinguish between options 1 and 2 above, and different treatment will be required.

A blood test should be performed during a period where the boy is experiencing symptoms, as with both options above, if the infection is not “active” (i.e. few or no parasites are visible in the blood) a blood test may prove negative. Rapid diagnostic tests which look for antibodies might be a good choice in this instance, as they may detect even a non-active infection.

Malaria and Seizures

QUESTION

Is it possible to contract malaria early in life and have a seizure 20 years later?

ANSWER

I think it is highly unlikely. There are only two types of malaria that can reoccur long after the initial infection (Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium ovale) and neither of these usually results in seizure or other cerebral effects. Looking through the literature, I can only find one case of P. vivax infection which had cerebral involvement (Beg et al., 2002, ‘Cerebral involvement in benign tertian malaria’, published in the American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, volume 67, issue 3, pages 230-232).

Post Malaria Symptoms

QUESTION

My girlfriend had malaria in Uganda. It was detected 2nd of October, it was mild form, she felt dizzy, temperature was little higher. She got Artefan, forth day she was in hospital for review, they told her from blood test that its not malaria anymore.

We came home (Slovakia) but week ago she had suddenly the same symptoms like she had had the first time—dizziness, pain in head, temperature. Rapid test showed her she has no malaria. But she is still feeling weak, once in five days she suddenly feels dizzy, sometimes temperature 37,3 Celsius (yesterday last time). Doctors found nothing. Could it be some post-malaria symptom or she might have some other infection? Is it normal?

ANSWER

Rapid tests for malaria are usually quite accurate, especially if the patient is experiencing symptoms. Moreover, the cycles of malaria infection are usually shorter, with patients experiencing fever and dizziness every other day (for Plasmodium falciparum, which is the most common kind in Uganda). I would recommend trying a second rapid test, preferably of a different brand, just to check—make sure it detects ALL kinds of malaria and not just Plasmodium falciparum, as while it is the most common and dangerous kind, there are other types in Uganda, such as P. ovale, which might not show up on a P. falciparum-only test.

If you have access to a travel clinic or hospital that has experience in tropical diseases, you could also see if they could do a blood slide and check for the presence of malaria parasites in your girlfriend’s red blood cells.

If a second rapid diagnostic test is negative, or there is no sign of visible malaria parasites in her blood, then I suspect she has some other infection, as continued symptoms are not usually a side effect of successful malaria treatment.

Recurrent Malaria

QUESTION

Malaria has been with me since the late 1980’s after 6 years in Malawi.
During the 90’s I had it twice per year in Feb and Sept. Blood tests always came up negative. Treatment was with Chloroquine, later Halafantrin and then Co Artem. 2 or 3 treatments were required as symptoms appeared 2 weeks after completion of initial treatment.

In 2004 I treated with a bodyweight specific dose of Arinate and did not have another bout until 1 week into a Southern Mozambique visit in Aug 2008. (I was on doxycycline as a prophylactic but discontinued due to it causing diarrhoea.) Treatment was with Artecospe (unsuccessful) and CoArtem (successful.) In Nov 2010 after a visit to N Botswana another bout – treated twice with CoArtem.
Sept 18 2011 it struck again. (I have not been near a malaria area since Nov 2010). CoArtem unsuccessful 3 times with Artecospe have not worked and now on Co Arinate.

Have I some resistant strain of Malaria? Does eating during a malaria bout reduce the efficacy of treatment?

ANSWER

So far, no strains of malaria have been discovered to be resistant to Coartem. Moreover, recurrent malaria is only caused by Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium ovale—neither of these are nearly as common in Malawi as Plasmodium falciparum, which can recrudesce (parasites re-appear in the blood) if not treated appropriately but will not relapse or reoccur months or years after the initial infection—if you have tested positive for malaria in your more recent bouts of illness, you should ask your doctor whether it could be P. vivax or P. ovale.

If it is one of these two species of malaria, you should ask about the possibility of taking primaquine to kill the dormant liver stages of the parasites and prevent future recurrence. You will need to be tested for G6DP prior to being able to take primaquine.

However, since you tested negative in Malawi initially, I suspect you did not have malaria at all at that point, and should have been tested further to determine what was causing your symptoms. Moreover, chloroquine should not have been the first treatment of choice, as resistance is rife in sub-Saharan Africa.

The symptoms of malaria are notoriously non-specific and therefore diagnosis is crucial prior to treatment, as many other infections will present with similar clinical symptoms, such as fever and nausea. Therefore, if you have any further symptoms which you suspect might be malaria, please visit a doctor or travel medicine clinic straight away for a blood test. If it is not malaria, there is no point taking further doses of Coartem or other anti-malarials and further tests might reveal another diagnosis.

Injections for Malaria Treatment?

QUESTION

I have a friend that just told me that she has Malaria. She said she has to go to the hospital every day for an injection for around the next 2 weeks. Is this a typical treatment. Why not just take pills? I`m just trying to wrap my head around this and understand the different treatments.

ANSWER

This is certainly not typical treatment for malaria. Uncomplicated malaria is usually treated with oral medication, and the type depends on the type of malaria you have. The most severe form of malaria, Plasmodium falciparum, is often resistant to chloroquine (still the first-line drug of choice for P. malariae, P. knowlesi and P. ovale infections, as well as for P. vivax in most parts of the world) and so first-line treatment is now usually an artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT), such as Coartem.

As far as I am aware, it is only in cases of complicated, severe malaria that intravenous or intramuscular treatment is used (usually quinine), and in those cases, treatment would not be administered on an outpatient basis. It may be that your friend has a specific medical requirement for a non-oral form of medication, but it is definitely unusual!

How is Malaria Treated

QUESTION

How is malaria treated?

ANSWER

This answer is copied from an earlier question about the various available cures for malaria.

Malaria can be cured with a number of different medications, depending on then type of malaria and how far the disease has been progressed.

For standard, non-complicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria, the World Health Organisation recommends use of artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs), such as Coartem. This is due to increasing levels of resistance to chloroquine in many parts of the world. Indeed, even though chloroquine is still used in many places as first-line treatment against P. vivax, P. malariae, P. ovale and P. knowlesi uncomplicated malaria, there is some evidence that resistance to this treatment is also emerging, for example in P. vivax in parts of south-east Asia.

In cases where malaria infection has progressed to a stage where oral administration of medication is not possible, or where cerebral symptoms are suspected, the usual treatment option is intravenous quinine.

In addition, P. vivax and P. ovale malaria parasites are able to produce forms (called hypnozoites) which can become dormant in liver hepatocyte cells after the blood stages of the infection have been cleared. These dormant forms can become reactivated weeks or even months or years after the initial infection, which is called a “relapse” of the infection. One drug, called primaquine, is able to kill these liver stages, and so patients with either of these types of malaria should also discuss the possibility of taking primaquine.

Apart from these first-line treatments, there are other medications which are used against malaria, both prophylactically as well as for treatment. These include orally-administered quinine, pyrimethamine, mefloquine, proguanil, atovaquone and sulfonamides.

 

Three Attacks of Malaria

QUESTION

I am right now recuperating from a third attack in less than one year’s time. What could have gone wrong ?

I am awaiting to hear your advice.

ANSWER

There are a number of reasons for multiple malaria attacks. One is that although malaria can be easily treated, these treatments often don’t prevent re-infection. There are separate drugs which can be used to prevent malaria (known as malaria prophylactics), but these must be taken all the time to be effective (usually either once a week, once a day or twice a day, depending on the specific drug), and so usually aren’t appropriate (due to the unknown health risks of taking the drugs for that long, plus the prohibitive cost) for people living in areas where malaria occurs.

For people living in malarial areas, other means of prevention are required, of which avoiding being bitten by mosquitoes is paramount. For this, it is recommended to sleep under a long-lasting insecticide treated bednet at night, when many malarial mosquitoes are active. Similarly, wearing long sleeved clothing, especially if it is impregnated with an insecticide such as permethrin, can help avoid the bite of infected mosquitoes.

Second of all, there are some types of malaria which cause repeat episodes of illness, even after only a single infection. Specifically, Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium ovale (the former is common in many parts of Asia in particular) can form life stages called hypnozoites which rest dormant in liver cells, even after the parasites in the blood have been cleared.

During this time, the patient will have no trace of malaria if they take a blood test, and they will feel fine. However, if these hypnozoites become active again, they will re-invade the blood, and the symptoms of disease will reoccur – at this stage, the parasite will once again be observable in the blood, and so the patient will be diagnosed as positive for malaria. As such, it is very important to find out what type of malaria you have, and if it is one of the above two species, then you can talk to your doctor about taking another type of medication, in addition to that which cures the blood infection, called primaquine—primaquine kills the hypnozoite liver stages of malaria and thus prevent recurrence of the disease.

Thanks for your question—since we think other people may benefit from the questions in this forum, I have removed your name and contact information to preserve your anonymity.

Who introduced malaria in which century?

QUESTION

Who introduced malaria in which century, how does it cause malaria and what is the virus’ name?

ANSWER

Malaria wasn’t introduced; it has been evolving alongside humans for thousands, if not millions of years. The first known mention of malaria by humans is in an ancient Chinese medical text, from 2700 BCE (before common era). Other ancient people, such as the Romans and the Greeks, knew the symptoms of malaria and described it in writing.

Malaria is actually not caused by a virus, but a single-celled animal called a protozoan. The genus name of the protozoans that cause malaria is Plasmodium, and there are five main species that infect humans: P. falciparum, P. vivax, P. ovale, P. malariae and P. knowlesi.

The malaria parasites cause the disease by entering into red blood cells and multiplying; when they have reproduced, they burst out of the red blood cell, destroying it. The patient’s blood is therefore rapidly full of malaria parasites, their waste products, plus bits of destroyed red blood cell; this produces an extreme immune reaction which causes many of the symptoms of malaria. In infection with P. falciparum, the most deadly and severe kind, infection with the parasite causes red blood cells to sequester in tiny red blood cells within major organs, causing reduced oxygen flow and complications. When this occurs in the brain, the result is cerebral malaria, which can result in convulsions and even a coma.

Signs of Malaria

Hello my question is how do I see malaria signs if i haven’t gone to check yet?

 

The key is to recognise whether you have any potential symptoms of malaria, or if you have been bitten a lot by mosquitoes recently and live in an area where malaria is present. Malaria can have many different symptoms, but the initial signs are similar to a flu-like illness, with high fever, chills, headache and muscle soreness or aches. A characteristic sign of malaria is cyclical fever, with peaks of severity every two or three days. Additionally, some people will experience nausea, coughing, vomiting and/or diarrhea.

Because these symptoms are quite generic of a wide variety of illnesses, if you live in a malaria-endemic region, it is crucial to be tested when you develop such symptoms. If you have recently traveled to a malarial area and start to experience these signs of infection, similarly you should inform your doctor of your travel history, as otherwise they might not recognize your symptoms as potentially that of malaria.

If you live in a malarial area, you can always visit a clinic and see if they will do a test to screen you for malaria, even if you don’t have the above symptoms. People who live in malarial areas develop partial immunity to the disease, meaning that new infections do not always present themselves as acutely as when they were children, or in people who are being infected for the first time. As such, some people can have low levels of parasite in their blood and while they may feel tired or a bit under the weather, do not have specific symptoms. This is especially the case for the less severe and deadly forms of malaria, such as Plasmodium vivax, P. ovale and P. malariae, so if you live in an area where any of these three are present, it might be worth getting a malaria test even if you don’t have symptoms.

However, it is very important not to accept treatment unless you are confirmed as having a positive diagnosis for malaria; taking treatment without having the disease can lead to resistance to the medication, and you may also experience side effects, which, though usually mild, are still probably better to avoid!