Medicine for Malaria

QUESTION

is rotam and maladar malaria medicine?

ANSWER

I have never heard of Rotam, but Maladar is the brand name of a combination sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine, and is used to treat malaria. However, it should be noted that it is not recommended by the World Health Organization as a first-line treatment option, due to concerns about drug resistance, and also lack of efficacy against certain types of malaria.

Instead, first-line recommended treatment is of an artemisinin-based combination therapy, or ACTs, which combine an artemisinin derivative (such as artesunate, artemether or dihyrdoartemisinin) with another anti-malarial drug, such as lumefantrine, piperaquine or mefloquine. Common brand names include Coartem, Lonart and Duo-Cotecxin.

Malareich and Pregnancy

QUESTION

Hi , am 31 weeks pregnant and had to take Malareich as my Anti malaria drug. I did not take the drug until I felt I had malaria, because I had body pains and headaches. Please advise if I will be ok after taking the malareich.

ANSWER

Malareich is a combination drug comprising of sulfadoxine and pyrimethamine, which is one of the medications recommended for treatment of malaria in pregnant women. However it sounds like you took the medication because you thought you had malaria – it is really important to be diagnosed by a doctor. For example, they will be able to ensure that you get the correct type of treatment for the kind of malaria you have. Malareich, for example, is probably not as effective against P. vivax malaria as P. falciparum malaria, but P. vivax is still susceptible to chloroquine, which is another drug that is suitable for the treatment of malaria in pregnant women.

Doxycycline After Malaria Diagnosis

QUESTION

My daughter is 24 and in rural Uganda for 4 months. She has been diagnosed with malaria (plasmodium falciparum) and is taking treatment now. Treatment is 3 tablets of Neosidar tablets contain of sulfadoxine BP and of pyrimethamine followed tonight and for the next 3 days by 4 tablets of Lumarten in the morning and at bedtime with milk. Lumarten is a mix of artemether and lumefantrine. Her doctor in Entebbe recommended she should stop taking doxycycline: “the doxy is like a lock on the door, and now someone has broken the lock, so it’s better to treat the malaria as it comes (while still using nets, bug spray, long sleeves, etc. to avoid bites) rather than keep taking the doxy every day.”

Should she stop taking doxycycline and should she be taking the Lumarten with milk? Thank you very much.

ANSWER

I am not personally familiar with Lumarten, but these antimalarials are often taken with food. Of more concern is that she has been given a sulfadoxine-pyramethamine treatment—these are no longer recommended as first line treatment against malaria, and so she should just take the artemisinin-based combination therapy (artemether-lumefantrine is such a combination therapy).

In terms of the doxycycline, I do not understand the doctor’s advice. There is no harm in continuing to take doxycycline after having malaria, and in fact it might prevent re-infection! Of course this depends on how long she is still in Uganda for—the doxy must be taken for four weeks after leaving the malarial area, so if she is returning home soon, she should weigh up the continued preventive benefit against the inconvenience of a long continuation of taking the medication. In general, I don’t like the doctor’s attitude that your daughter should just accept continuing infections with malaria, and “treat them as they come.” It’s much better to use all available methods for prevention. One thing to consider is that dairy products inhibit the uptake of doxycycline, so if your daughter was also taking her doxy with milk (some doctors mistakenly advise this, to prevent stomach upsets when taking the medication), that might have been one reason why she still got infected.

Malaria Fever and Recovery

QUESTION

My 21 year old daughter spent 4 months on a study abroad program in Dakar. A week before returning home she started having night fevers and would complain of retrosternal pain and rib and neck and shoulder pain. The next day she would be fine.

The episodes came every other day and eventually it occurred to her that it might be malaria. It was evening so she went to a pharmacy for a rapid diagnostic test which they didn’t have but they felt she had malaria based on her symptoms and gave her a 3 day course of artesunate-mefloquine.

She returned to the United States and a day after taking her last dose, she was seen by a physician and tests were done which showed that she had contracted Plasmodium falciparum malaria. Other than the smears, all her lab tests and CXR were normal and there were no abnormal findings on physical exam, in fact she was the picture of health.

We were told that she was cured and that no follow up was necessary and that she could continue with her planned trip to Thailand the next day. About 6 hours before boarding the plane to Bangkok she developed fever of 100.9 but had absolutely no other symptoms or pain. About an hour later she had a bout of diarrhea. She had one more low grade fever on the flight (99.8). I spoke to another physician who seems more familiar with malaria and was told that she is not actually cured and may continue to have episodic fevers and symptoms for a while or it’s possible she was just suffering from an ordinary garden variety gastrointestinal bug.

I have many questions. I understand that her malaria is the most virulent type. How is it that all her lab work and physical exam is normal 1 day after completing treatment? Can we expect it to remain normal? What causes the episodic fevers if she is supposedly cured? She is on doxycycline again prophylactically (which she was on in Senegal) while in Thailand. Should she be on something else since she did contract malaria on doxycycline? (She took it religiously). Thanks for any advice. She will be seeing a physician in Bangkok ASAP, but since I won’t be there to ask questions, I am hoping you can give me some answers. Your site is the best information I have found on malaria.

ANSWER

Many thanks for the comprehensive information you have provided regarding your daughter’s condition. Even though your daughter did have the most virulent form of malaria, she was very smart to seek treatment relatively promptly, and lucky to receive appropriate medication (artemisinin-based combination therapies, such as artesunate-mefloquine, are recommended by the World Health Organization as first-line treatment against malaria). It is likely due to this prompt and effective action that her lab tests and blood parameters were all normal so soon after treatment; had she waited longer for treatment, the consequences could have been much more severe. No resistance to this medication has been detected in Africa as of yet, so she should be fully cured and thus her health should remain stable; a blood smear, where her blood is examined under a microscope, can determine this; this is a very standard procedure so could easily be carried out in Thailand if she wants.

Fever is a side effect of the body’s immune system responding to a disease threat, so it is not uncommon for some symptoms to carry on after treatment. In addition, mild side effects of anti-malarial medication can often mimic the symptoms of malaria itself, including fever and nausea.

Given also the (entirely reasonable) possibility of an additional, unrelated stomach bug, I suspect that your daughter has successfully beaten off this malaria attack, and while she should remain vigilant if similar symptoms arise again, her health in the future should not be adversely affected at all by this episode.

Also, as mentioned briefly above, medical professionals in Thailand should be well equipped to diagnose and treat malaria if she suspects she has been reinfected. It is worth noting that malaria in south-east Asia has shown signs of resistance to mefloquine (as well as other drugs, such as chloroquine and sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine), so if she does require treatment while there, she should make sure the medication they provide does not contain any of the afore-mentioned compounds.

Regarding doxycycline, it’s great that your daughter took it religiously—that is certainly the first step towards protection. Randomized placebo controlled trials have shown it is between 92-96% effective in preventing P. falciparum malaria, which is very good, but obviously not 100% perfect – even when taken perfectly, some infections do occur. In addition, there is some data which suggests that dairy products, taken together with doxycycline, may limit  the uptake of the drug. This is rarely communicated to patients, who are instead contrarily told sometimes that taking the pills together with dairy products can reduce side effects! As such, please let your daughter know that she should avoid dairy products for 2-3 hours around the time she takes her doxycycline.

Relapsing Malaria

QUESTION

I’m constantly on malaria drugs, fall ill every 2 weeks and always diagnosed with malaria.I’m getting really fed up and need a permanent solution to all of this. I want to live a healthy life and I’m tired of being on malaria drugs. How do I overcome malaria permanently?

ANSWER

It is very unusual to be reinfected so constantly with malaria. First of all, how are you getting diagnosed? You should be getting a blood test, and not relying on symptoms only; the symptoms of malaria are very general and it could be that you are suffering from something else entirely.

The two main methods for accurate diagnosis are blood smear and rapid diagnostic test. The blood smear is used throughout the world, but can sometimes miss light infections (though if you feel sick, your infection is likely heavy enough to be detected by this method). The problem is that it requires a trained technician to take the sample, prepare it properly, and read it thoroughly and accurately. In my experience, many clinics, especially if they are rushed and busy, will not take the time to read a blood slide properly, and will just diagnose malaria without looking. This is really bad!

It is very important to be properly diagnosed, so you can get the correct treatment, and if you don’t have malaria, you can be diagnosed for something else. The second kind of diagnostic is a rapid diagnostic test, or RDT. This looks for antibodies to malaria in your blood, and is very sensitive and quick. In an ideal world, you should try to have both done, to cross-check the results.

The next thing is to check whether you are receiving the correct treatment for the type of malaria that you have (if you are positively diagnosed with malaria). In many parts of the world, malaria has become resistant to some of the main medications used against it. Notably, this is the case in many places with Plasmodium falciparum, the most dangerous kind of malaria, which has become resistant to chloroquine in many parts of the world, to sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (sold as Fansidar in many places) and also to mefloquine (sold as Lariam) in some places. As such, the World Health Organisation NEVER recommends these treatments be given as first line drugs against P. falciparum malaria—instead, they recommend artemisinin-combination therapies (ACTs), such as Alu, Coartem or Duo-Cotecxin. If you have been diagnosed with P. falciparum, you must try to take these kinds of drugs first. No resistance to ACTs has been reported, so if you take the full dose correctly, as prescribed by your doctor (and check to make sure the drugs are not expired), then you should be cured of malaria.

However, treatment does not stop you from getting infected again, and this is where prevention comes it. Preventing malaria is a cornerstone of control efforts. Since malaria is transmitted by a mosquito, preventing mosquitoes from entering the house, and particularly stopping them from biting you at night, is crucial. Screening all doors and windows can help stop mosquitoes from getting in, and in high transmission areas, many people will also spray inside their houses every once in a while with insecticides to kill any lingering insects.

In addition, sleeping under a long-lasting insecticide treated bednet can drastically reduce the number of mosquitoes that are able to bite you at night. If you already have a net, it may be worth re-dipping it in insecticide (usually permethrin) to make sure it is still working effectively. The mosquitoes that transmit malaria feed at night, so if you are walking around outside in the evenings or at night, it is important to try to wear long-sleeved clothing, to prevent them from accessing your skin.

All of these efforts will help prevent you from getting malaria again in the future.

Malaria Fever

QUESTION

My Father aged 65 years was diagnosed with 2 types of malaria almost a week back. he has been given medicines but temperature is fluctuating and not coming down. all other organs are functionining properly except platelet count which is little less.

Now he has been suggested new medicines for a duration of 14 days.
How fast can he recover from this malaria and when will the fever come down?

ANSWER

When patients are given the appropriate treatment against malaria, the fever is usually reduced very quickly and the patient will start to recover after a few days. The right kind of treatment depends on the severity of the infection and the type (or, in your father’s case, types) of malaria the patient is infected with.

If your father was infected with P. falciparum alongside another type of malaria (probably P. vivax, P. malariae or P. ovale), then he should have first received an artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) drug first. These drugs combine artemisinin or a derivative (such as artemether, artesunate or dihydroartemisinin) with another anti-malarial, such as lumefantrine. Common brand names of these ACTs include Coartem, Alu and Duo-Cotecxin.

There are no reported cases of resistance to these combination therapies at present, so if your father continued to feel sick after completing this treatment, he should be re-tested for malaria; it is possible that the malaria parasites were killed, and his continuing fever was an after effect either of the medication or just an indication that the body was recovering from the infection.

If he was re-tested and found positive, then other second-line drugs can be prescribed. However, it is important to note that malaria is resistant to chloroquine in many areas, and so this drug is not suitable for treatment in these places. Similarly, resistance is widespread to sulfadoxine-pyrimethamines, such as Fansidar, and in south-east Asia, P. falciparum is also resistant to mefloquine (Lariam) in some cases. As such, your father’s doctor should be careful to prescribe him an appropriate treatment for the area in which he is living.

In addition, if your father was found to be co-infected with either P. vivax or P. ovale, then there is a chance of later relapse into malaria again, weeks or even months after the initial infection has been treated. This is because the parasites in these types of malaria can form dormant stages in the liver, where they escape being killed by the normal forms of treatment. In this case, your father should ask about the possibility of being treated with primaquine; the course is normally 14 days, so it may be that this is what his doctors have currently given him. If so, this will kill the dormant liver stages and prevent relapse. Prior to taking primaquine, patients should be tested for G6DP deficiency, as patients with this condition may become dangerously anaemic when they take primaquine.

Can’t Get Rid of Malaria

QUESTION

Each and every month I am suffering from malaria ..Treatment is also going on but I am unable to get rid of it.

ANSWER

It is very unusual to be reinfected so constantly with malaria. First of all, how are you getting diagnosed? You should be getting a blood test, and not relying on symptoms only; the symptoms of malaria are very general and it could be that you are suffering from something else entirely. The two main methods for accurate diagnosis are blood smear and rapid diagnostic test. The blood smear is used throughout the world, but can sometimes miss light infections (though if you feel sick, your infection is likely heavy enough to be detected by this method). The problem is that it requires a trained technician to take the sample, prepare it properly, and read it thoroughly and accurately. In my experience, many clinics, especially if they are rushed and busy, will not take the time to read a blood slide properly, and will just diagnose malaria without looking. This is really bad! It is very important to be properly diagnosed, so you can get the correct treatment, and if you don’t have malaria, you can be diagnosed for something else. The second kind of diagnostic is a rapid diagnostic test, or RDT. This looks for antibodies to malaria in your blood, and is very sensitive and quick. In an ideal world, you should try to have both done, to cross-check the results.

The next thing is to check whether you are receiving the correct treatment for the type of malaria that you have (if you are positively diagnosed with malaria). In many parts of the world, malaria has become resistant to some of the main medications used against it. Notably, this is the case in many places with Plasmodium falciparum, the most dangerous kind of malaria, which has become resistant to chloroquine in many parts of the world, to sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (sold as Fansidar in many places) and also to mefloquine (sold as Lariam) in some places. As such, the World Health Organisation NEVER recommends these treatments be given as first line drugs against P. falciparum malaria – instead, they recommend artemisinin-combination therapies (ACTs), such as Alu, Coartem or Duo-Cotecxin. If you have been diagnosed with P. falciparum, you must try to take these kinds of drugs first. No resistance to ACTs has been reported, so if you take the full dose correctly, as prescribed by your doctor (and check to make sure the drugs are not expired), then you should be cured of malaria.

However, treatment does not stop you from getting infected again, and this is where prevention comes it. Preventing malaria is a cornerstone of control efforts. Since malaria is transmitted by a mosquito, preventing mosquitoes from entering the house, and particularly stopping them from biting you at night, is crucial. Screening all doors and windows can help stop mosquitoes from getting in, and in high transmission areas, many people will also spray inside their houses every once in a while with insecticides to kill any lingering insects. In addition, sleeping under a long-lasting insecticide treated bednet can drastically reduce the number of mosquitoes that are able to bite you at night. If you already have a net, it may be worth re-dipping it in insecticide (usually permethrin) to make sure it is still working effectively. The mosquitoes that transmit malaria feed at night, so if you are walking around outside in the evenings or at night, it is important to try to wear long-sleeved clothing, to prevent them from accessing your skin. All of these efforts will help prevent you from getting malaria again in the future.

Malaria Prevention

QUESTION

What are the ways in which you can prevent yourself from being infected with malaria?

ANSWER

Malaria prevention consists of a combination of mosquito avoidance measures (since malaria is transmitted by infected mosquitoes) and chemoprophylaxis (medication to prevent the establishment of malaria in your body, if you do get bitten). Although very efficacious, none of the recommended interventions are 100% effective.

Mosquito Avoidance Measures

  • Because of the nocturnal feeding habits of Anopheles mosquitoes, malaria transmission occurs primarily between dusk and dawn.
  • Contact with mosquitoes can be reduced by remaining in well-screened areas, using mosquito bed nets (preferably insecticide-treated nets), using a pyrethroid-containing flying-insect spray in living and sleeping areas during evening and nighttime hours, and wearing clothes that cover most of the body.
  • All travelers should use an effective mosquito repellent.
  • The most effective repellent against a wide range of vectors is DEET (N,N-diethylmetatoluamide), an ingredient in many commercially available insect repellents. The actual concentration of DEET varies widely among repellents. DEET formulations as high as 50% are recommended for both adults and children older than 2 months of age (see the Protection Against Mosquitoes, Ticks, and Other Insects and Arthropods section later in this chapter). DEET should be applied to the exposed parts of the skin when mosquitoes are likely to be present.
  • In addition to using a topical insect repellent, a permethrin-containing product may be applied to bed nets and clothing for additional protection against mosquitoes.

Chemoprophylaxis

      • All currently recommended primary chemoprophylaxis regimens involve taking a medicine before travel, during travel, and for a period of time after leaving the malaria endemic area. Beginning the drug before travel allows the antimalarial agent to be in the blood before the traveler is exposed to malaria parasites.
      • Presumptive antirelapse therapy (also known as terminal prophylaxis) uses a medication towards the end of the exposure period (or immediately thereafter) to prevent relapses or delayed-onset clinical presentations of malaria caused by hypnozoites (dormant liver stages) of P. vivax or P. ovale. Because most malarious areas of the world (except the Caribbean) have at least one species of relapsing malaria, travelers to these areas have some risk for acquiring either P. vivax or P. ovale, although the actual risk for an individual traveler is difficult to define. Presumptive anti-relapse therapy is generally indicated only for persons who have had prolonged exposure in malaria-endemic areas (e.g., missionaries, volunteers).
      • In choosing an appropriate chemoprophylactic regimen before travel, the traveler and the health-care provider should consider several factors. The travel itinerary should be reviewed in detail and compared with the information on where malaria transmission occurs within a given country to determine whether the traveler will actually be traveling in a part of the country where malaria occurs and if significant antimalarial drug resistance has been reported in that location.
      • The resistance of P. falciparum to chloroquine has been confirmed in all areas with P. falciparum malaria except the Caribbean, Central America west of the Panama Canal, and some countries in the Middle East. In addition, resistance to sulfadoxine–pyrimethamine (e.g., Fansidar) is widespread in the Amazon River Basin area of South America, much of Southeast Asia, other parts of Asia, and in large parts of Africa. Resistance to mefloquine has been confirmed on the borders of Thailand with Burma (Myanmar) and Cambodia, in the western provinces of Cambodia, in the eastern states of Burma (Myanmar), on the border between Burma and China, along the borders of Laos and Burma, and the adjacent parts of the Thailand–Cambodia border, as well as in southern Vietnam.
      • Additional factors to consider are the patient’s other medical conditions, medications being taken (to assess potential drug–drug interactions), the cost of the medicines, and the potential side effects.

The medications recommended for chemoprophylaxis of malaria may also be available at overseas destinations. However, combinations of these medications and additional drugs that are not recommended may be commonly prescribed and used in other countries. Travelers should be strongly discouraged from obtaining chemoprophylactic medications while abroad. The quality of these products is not known, and they may not be protective and may be dangerous. These medications may have been produced by substandard manufacturing practices, may be counterfeit, or may contain contaminants. Additional information on this topic can be found in an FDA document

Purchasing Medications Outside the United States.

Treatment of Chronic Vivax Malaria

QUESTION

What is the treatment of chronic Vivax malaria?

ANSWER

Blood stage infection with Plasmodium vivax can usually be treated successfully with chloroquine, though resistance is spreading in some areas (notably the Pacific Islands, Papua New Guinea, parts of south-east Asia and especially Indonesia, and Peru). P. vivax is also sensitive to artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) and as no resistance to artemisinin has been reported, these are widely recommended (though combinations which include sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine should be avoided as many strains of P. vivax appear to be resistant to pyrimethamine).

Liver stage (i.e. relapsing) P. vivax can only be treated with one drug: primaquine. Instances of liver stage treatment failure are relatively commonplace, and may be strain or dosage dependent. Primaquine is not recommended for people with G6DP deficiency, so potential patients, and particularly those from locations or ethnic groups known to have high levels of G6DP deficiency, should be tested prior to treatment.

Repeated Malaria

QUESTION

Since January 2011 I got three times malaria. Is it come regularly? Last week also I got maleria and I took medicine but still I have mild headache and sweating feeling tiredenes in between..

ANSWER

The timing of the repeated malaria episodes you have experienced means that it could be recrudescence (where treatment does not completely kill all the malaria parasites in your blood), relapse (where the malaria goes dormant in your liver, then comes back—this is only caused by Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium ovale malaria) or even re-infection.

However, first of all, the most important thing is to make sure you are properly diagnosed with malaria and secondly, that you receive the right type of treatment for the kind of malaria that you have.

The symptoms of malaria are very general (fever, chills, nausea, tiredness, aches) and can also be caused by many other illnesses and diseases. As such, in order to confirm you actually have malaria, you should have a blood test (thick and thin blood smear, looked at under the microscope by a trained technician, or a rapid diagnostic test (RDT). In some places you can buy these RDTs from local pharmacies and do the test yourself at home).

Depending on where you live, there may be different types of malaria present; in this case, if you do have malaria, it is important to find out which one you have.

P. falciparum is the most common kind in sub-Saharan Africa and first-line treatment is an artemisinin-based combination therapy, such as Coartem – most areas have P. falciparum that is resistant to chloroquine, so this is not appropriate as treatment, nor are sulfadoxine and pyrimethamine combinations (such as Fansidar).

If you have P. vivax or P. ovale, chloroquine may be used, again depending on where you are and whether resistance is known from your area or not. In addition, you might also talk to your doctor about taking primaquine to prevent future relapse and recurrence of the infection.

Repeated re-infection can be prevented by protecting yourself more thoroughly against getting bitten by an infected mosquito. For example, you should sleep under a long-lasting insecticide treated bednet, screen your windows and doors and wear long-sleeved clothing at night and in the evenings. Indoor residual spraying, which coats your walls with insecticide, can also prevent mosquitoes from persisting inside your home.