Traditional Methods for Malaria Treatment and Prevention

QUESTION

What are the traditional methods on treating and preventing malaria?

ANSWER

Many different cultures have had their own traditional ways of treating malaria. Perhaps the two best known come from the native tribes in the Western Amazon basin and the ancient Chinese.

Tribes in the Amazon used the bark of a shrub called Cinchona to treat fevers and shivering; Spanish priests in this region observed traditional Quechua healers using this bark and started using it themselves to treat the fevers associated with malaria. Many centuries later, the active ingredient from this bark was isolated and called quinine, which is still used in the treatment of malaria today.

In ancient China, traditional healers would use the plant sweet wormwood (Artemisia annua, to give it its full Latin name), also to treat fevers and the symptoms of malaria. For many hundreds of years, this traditional cure was forgotten about, until the 1970s when a concerted effort led by Mao Tse-Tung began to search for new anti-malarial compounds as part of their Vietnam war effort. Their scientists, led by Dr Youyou, re-discovered sweet wormwood and extracted a potent anti-malarial compound from it, called artemisinin. This compound and and its many derivatives, in the form of artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs), are now the mainstay of the World Health Organization’s first-line recommended treatment against uncomplicated malaria.

First Cases of Malaria

QUESTION

What is the first infected person with Plasmodium?

ANSWER

Plasmodium, the single-celled parasite which causes malaria, has been infecting humans since ancient times. In fact, the first written reference to its symptoms dates back almost 5000 years, to an ancient Chinese manuscript! It was also known from the writings of other ancient peoples, such as the Greeks, Romans and Egyptians; when Europeans arrived in the Americas, they found that local tribes had long recognised the dangers of malaria, and already had natural remedies for fever, including the bark of the cinchona tree, which was later used to make quinine (a moden anti-malarial). As such, it is impossible to say now who the first person infected with Plasmodium was, but it definitely occurred many thousands of years ago.

However, it was only until the late 19th century that people understood that Plasmodium parasites caused malaria, and knew how to observe the infection in the patient’s blood. This was done was Charles Louis Alphonse Laveran, a French physician working in Algeria. As such, you could argue that the first person known to have Plasmodium was the patient he observed the parasite within, when he first described Plasmodium. Unfortunately, the patient had died of the disease; Laveran examined the blood after the patient had perished. I am not sure the patient’s name was recorded.

Herbal Treatment for Malaria

QUESTION

Can any form of malaria be treated by herbs or plants, and how long does it take to recover from malaria?

ANSWER

Actually, two of the most important kinds of anti-malarial medication are derived by substances found naturally in plants, though they need to be processed in certain ways before the full pharmaceutical effect is felt.

Quinine, administered intravenously, is currently the first-line treatment for complicated malaria (i.e. when the patient has a history of high fever, plus additional severe symptoms such as impaired consciousness). It is derived from the bark of trees of the genus Cinchona, which are native to the tropical rainforests of western South America. Long known to native populations for its medicinal properties, it became known to Europeans in the early 17th century when the Countess of Chinchón, the wife of the viceroy of Peru at the time, was cured by it, having been suffering from what was likely malaria.

Similarly, artemisinin, currently used in combination with other anti-malarial compounds as the first-line treatment against non-complicated malaria (these combinations are known as artemisinin-based combination therapies, or ACTs), is derived from wormwood, a shrub native to Asia but now found throughout the world. As with the Cinchona trees, traditional healers in China had used wormwood to treat fever for thousands of years, but its use had been forgotten in modern times, until its rediscovery in the 1970s. Nowadays, artemisinin is not recommended for treatment alone, as it is feared this will lead to resistance developing, and so it is only used in the combination therapies described above.

If treated promptly, and with the correct form of medication, recovery from malaria can take only a few days. If not, recovery can take much longer (even up to weeks), and in the case of P. falciparum malaria, the most deadly kind, the infection can become life threatening in only a day or two. P. knowlesi (found in parts of south-east Asia), though less fatal than P. falciparum, can also become severe rapidly, and so prompt treatment is especially necessary for these two kinds of malaria.

Discovery of Cinchona

QUESTION

Cinchona was discovered in which country?

ANSWER

Cinchona” refers to a genus of trees which are known for having strong alkaloid compounds in their bark, and notably one which has anti-malarial properties.

This particular alkaloid is now known as “quinine.” Cinchona trees are native to South America, and were long used by native people to treat fevers—as such, it is perhaps impossible to ever know exactly where the bark of these trees was first used as a medicine.

The first records of its use come from after the Spanish conquest of South America; as legend has it, the Countess of Chinchón, who was the wife of the Viceroy of Peru in Lima, was the first European to be treated with the bark of a particular tree to cure a malaria infection, in the 1640s. She survived, and apparently brought the tree back with her to Europe, where its use against malaria proliferated as Europeans explored and colonized tropical regions throughout the world.

History of Fighting Malaria

QUESTION

What are some examples of attempts of fighting this disease that happened in the past?

ANSWER

The battle against malaria has been going on, in one form or another, for literally thousands of years. The ancient Chinese mention the symptoms of the disease in a medical scroll as early as 2700 BCE – even more remarkably, a herb called Artemesia has been used in traditional Chinese medicine for more than 2000 years to treat malaria, and compounds extracted from that same herb are the basis for some of the most effective modern medications, known as artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs). Indigenous tribes in the Americas also had traditional medicines to treat malaria; having conquered the New World, the Spanish learned of a bark, from the Cinchona tree, which could cure malaria. Quinine, extracted from this same tree bark, is still used today to treat malaria.

However, back then the causes of malaria were not known—it wasn’t until the late 19th century that a more complete understanding of malaria would emerge. The first key development in this process was the observation of the parasites that cause malaria in a patient’s blood, which was first done by Charles Louis Alphonse Laveran in 1880.

A few years later, in 1897, a British army doctor called Ronald Ross discovered that the parasite was transmitted via the bite of infected mosquitoes, of the genus Anopheles. This latter finding allowed for the emergence of the first programmes for malaria control, which focused on vector control, through insecticide use and elimination of water bodies used by the mosquito larvae. An early example of the success of this approach came in the building of the Panama Canal; started in 1906, progress was initially slow, due to the enormous proportion of workers who fell ill from yellow fever and malaria. With vector control, the number of cases plummeted, and the canal was finally opened in 1914.

While prophylactic quinine had also been part of the control strategy during the building of the Panama Canal, it played a much more secondary role to vector control. Using similar strategies, focusing primarily on killing adult mosquitoes through insecticide spraying (mainly DDT), the United States of America successfully eliminated malaria from its shores in the early 1950s. Prior to this, transmission had occurred across most of the south-east of the country.

In the last 50 years, access to early diagnosis and effective treatment have gained a more prominent role among many malaria control strategies, although prevention is still seen as crucial. Many developing countries, where malaria is still rife, have set up national control programmes, which seek to ensure that all communities have access to adequate care and information about malaria prevention.

A key tool in the prevention arsenal has been the long-lasting insecticide treated bednet; sleeping underneath one prevents bites from the mosquitoes that carry malaria, which are most active in the evenings and at night, especially in children and pregnant women, who are among the people most at risk from infection. Bednet distribution has been a major focus of many malaria campaigns, and very successful in many places; in 2008, for example, bednet coverage was estimated at over 80% of the at-risk population in Djibouti, Mali, Ethiopia and Sao Tome and Principe.