00:01
Some of the symptoms of malaria include fever and paroxysms of shaking chills, and of course anemia,
as the parasites multiply in red blood cells and destroy them.
00:14
The paroxysms coincide with lysis of red blood cells,
which of course is done to release the merozoites, this causes the production of cytokines
and the waves of fever so characteristic of the disease.
00:29
Sometime the replication of the parasites within the blood cell is synchronized,
remember your body's full of many, many red blood cells
but they can all be, or many of them can be infected with malaria parasites
and they can all mature at the same time and rupture at the same time in cycles,
and a characteristic feature of malaria is this bouts of fever
that occur in cycles as all these red blood cells burst at more or less, the same time.
01:00
Other organs may also be involved in malaria besides the liver and the red blood cells,
and this can result in hemolysis which leads to icterus and jaundice,
effects on the liver and enlarged spleen,
particularly as a consequence of trapping of infected red blood cells.
01:21
Now, normally, a red blood cell is very deformable,
it can move through tight spaces like capillaries and organs very readily,
but when they are infected with malaria parasites they become less deformable,
they get trapped in organs with small capillaries like the spleen and that causes disease.
01:40
Now, the four different species of malaria
that I mentioned to you at the beginning of our talk differ in their virulence,
all four of them were shown in their blood forms here,
and depending on where you are when you get infected
you can have a somewhat different outcome.
01:56
The long-term effects of repeated infections which can happen
because immunity is not protective, you may have learning deficits,
a reduce growth rate, and in pregnant women, can lead to spontaneous abortion.
02:11
So this is one of the tragedies of malaria in kids,
young kids who get repeatedly infected over and over,
they feel miserable for months at a time, they can't learn properly
and they can't go on to be productive adults in society.
02:26
How do you diagnose malaria?
One way is to take a little bit of peripheral blood and to stain it
and look for the blood forms that we have just talked about.
02:35
On the right is a microscope slide on which we've made a thin or a thick film of blood,
we've simply smeared the blood out and a thick film has more cells in it
so you have better chance of seeing what you're looking for,
you can stain it and look for the malaria parasites.
02:52
Plasmodium falciparum displays these blood forms shown on the right,
there are 20-30 some odd different blood forms starting from number one
at the upper left all the way down to the lower right
and you can see many of these but not all of them in peripheral blood
because some of them are restricted to organs.
03:11
So in peripheral blood, you can readily see stages 1 to 15 and 27 through 30.
03:19
And in some of the slides we've looked at, you can see some of these,
and a good exercise would be for you to go back and look at the slides I've shown you
and see if you can pick out what blood form it is.
03:28
Natural infection -- natural immunity to infection, is imperfect,
you're not protected, even though you do respond,
you are not protected against reinfection, so this is the hallmark of malaria,
throughout your whole life if you lived out in an endemic area,
you will be re-infected over and over and over again,
and as I said, this leads to a miserable life in which you can't do anything productive.
03:57
How do you treat malaria?
Chloroquine was once the drug of choice.
04:01
It was an amazing wonder drug that could get rid of malaria instantly.
04:06
The way it works is it blocks heme detoxification in red blood cells,
so when the parasites are replicating in red blood cells,
they wanna break apart heme and to get the iron part out,
the heme itself is toxic, the malaria wants to break it down,
this drug prevents that detoxification that results in killing of the parasite.
04:28
However, the use of this drug over many years led to extensive resistance
so it's not really useful, not anymore.
04:35
Fortunately, we do have other drugs like mefloquine, malarone, quinine,
halofantrine, and the artemisinins, the later, very effective drugs
can be modified in ways to make derivatives.
04:50
Recently, their discovery was recognized with a Nobel Prize.
04:55
How do you prevent infection?
This is sometimes a good way to not have to use an anti-malarial drug,
now you can engage in mosquito control and try and spray for mosquitoes.
05:10
This isn't always practical and we have limitations on what insecticides we can use, but that's one possibility.
05:16
Mosquito nets like this one on top of the bed.
05:20
It's a very simple way to avoid being bitten at night, the time in which many mosquitoes prefer to bite.
05:27
However, during the day you're out and about,
you're still going to be bitten during the day, so this doesn't solve all the problems.
05:34
These nets over the bed can also be sprayed with insect repellant.
05:37
You can wear insect repellants on your body during the day
and you can cover your body with clothing.
05:43
You can wear long-sleeved shirts and long pants with the pants tucked into your socks
and that leaves just your face which you could cover with repellant to keep the mosquitoes off.
05:54
You can also put screens in your windows, this is an amazing low-tech solution.
05:59
Many of the homes and areas endemic for malaria have open widows with no screens on them;
the mosquitoes come and go as they wish.
06:06
A simple thing like a window screen cuts down on the incidence of malaria.
06:12
We may think that this is nothing but in our world, screens are usual, but not everywhere.
06:17
Now, this is such an important disease that not only
are people are trying to develop new antimalarial compounds,
but new vaccines of all sorts of different types are under development
and I think some time in the next 5 to 10 years or so, with a lot of funding from the Gates Foundation,
these vaccines will become a reality.