What is malaria?

QUESTION:

What is malaria?

ANSWER:

Malaria is a disease caused by a parasitic single-celled animal known as Plasmodium. There are different species of Plasmodium, which cause different kinds of malaria. The main types which infect humans are P. falciparum, P. vivax, P. ovale and P. malariae. The parasite is transmitted by certain species of mosquito; the parasite lives in the human blood stream and so goes in to the mosquito when the insect feeds. When the same individual mosquito then feeds on another person, it transmits parasites into a new host.

The symptoms of malaria are caused by the actions that the parasite undertakes while in the human host. For example, part of its reproductive cycle involves invading and then multiplying inside red blood cells. Once several cycles of reproduction have occurred, the new parasites burst out of the red blood cell, destroying it. The cycles are times so that all the new parasites burst out of the red blood cells at the same time; this coordinated destruction of the red blood cells, either every 24, 48 or 72 hours, depending on the malaria species, causes the one day, two day or three day cycles of fevers and chills that characterize malaria infection episodes.

Can malaria come back?

QUESTION:

If you had malaria once, can it return for a second time without being in a malaria area?

ANSWER:

Yes. There are several ways in which malaria can come back without being re-infected again. The blood forms of the parasites can sometimes persist at low numbers, so that the patient no longer has any symptoms; if these blood forms begin to reproduce again, the patient will once again begin to feel sick and have malaria symptoms. This is known as ‘recrudescence’ and can occur as quickly as within the same year as the initial infection but also as long as fifty years later, depending on the type of malaria! Treating the infection thoroughly, and being tested for parasites after treatment, is one way to avoid recrudescence.

The other way in which malaria can come back is through ‘recurrence’, which is when the malaria parasite enters a dormant phase which resides in the liver. Again, the patient will feel no symptoms while the malaria is dormant, but once these liver stages change into the blood stages and reproduce, symptoms will reoccur. This form of relapse only occurs with Plasmodium vivax and P. ovale infections, and can be prevented through taking an additional form of medication, called primequine, at the same time as the normal malaria drugs when diagnosed. This extra medicine kills the liver forms of malaria and thus prevents recurrence. For more details on this, please see the comments I made, on behalf of Dr Etty Villanueva, on the post ‘Malaria Symptoms and Causes’, published on the 22nd of February, 2011.

What is malaria? What Causes Malaria?

QUESTIONS:

What is malaria?
What causes malaria?

ANSWER:

I have copied below the text from an earlier question, also asking about the causes of malaria and explaining what it is:

Malaria is a disease caused by a parasitic single-celled animal known as Plasmodium. There are different species of Plasmodium, which cause different kinds of malaria. The main types which infect humans are P. falciparum, P. vivax, P. ovale and P. malariae. The parasite is transmitted by certain species of mosquito; the parasite lives in the human blood stream and so goes in to the mosquito when the insect feeds. When the same individual mosquito then feeds on another person, it transmits parasites into a new host.

The symptoms of malaria are caused by the actions that the parasite undertakes while in the human host. For example, part of its reproductive cycle involves invading and then multiplying inside red blood cells. Once several cycles of reproduction have occurred, the new parasites burst out of the red blood cell, destroying it. The cycles are times so that all the new parasites burst out of the red blood cells at the same time; this coordinated destruction of the red blood cells, either every 24, 48 or 72 hours, depending on the malaria species, causes the one day, two day or three day cycles of fevers and chills that characterize malaria infection episodes.


What are the three stages of a malaria attack?

QUESTION:

What are the three stages of a typical malaria attack?

ANSWER:

I’m not entirely clear as to what you’re asking with this question; do you mean the stages of infection within the human host, or the successive changes in the symptoms during the fever cycles that characterise a malarial episode?

If you mean the latter, then the three typical stages of symptoms during a malaria attack are characterised by an initial feeling of coldness, which is indicative of the early stages of the fever. This develops into the patient feeling much, much warmer, and even uncomfortably hot—at this point, the patient’s fever can spike dramatically, up to over 40 degrees C. The body combats this fever by sweating profusely—these sweats constitute the third stage of the attack, and have the effect of gradually bringing the patient’s temperature down.

These three stages are repeated at intervals of 24, 48 or 72 hours, depending on the type of malaria. This is due to the cyclical and coordinated bursting of red blood cells, releasing the next life stage of the malaria parasite, and which causes the bulk of the fever in patients.

If you intended to ask about the stages of infection during the life cycle of the malaria parasite, the image below (from CDC), is a very clear and useful guide to the incredibly complex life cycle of Plasmodium species.

generalised malaria life cycle

Generalised life cycle of the malaria parasite (courtesy of CDC: www.cdc.gov)