keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30547849/has-doxycycline-in-combination-with-anti-malarial-drugs-a-role-to-play-in-intermittent-preventive-treatment-of-plasmodium-falciparum-malaria-infection-in-pregnant-women-in-africa
#41
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tiphaine Gaillard, Manon Boxberger, Marylin Madamet, Bruno Pradines
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), Plasmodium falciparum malaria during pregnancy is responsible for deleterious consequences for the mother and her child. The administration of intermittent preventive treatment (IPTp) with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) at each antenatal care visit as early as 13 weeks of gestation until the time of delivery is a strategy that is currently recommended by WHO for the prevention of malaria in pregnancy. However, the emergence and the spread of the resistance to SP in Africa raise the question of the short-term effectiveness of the strategy...
December 14, 2018: Malaria Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30351243/antimalarial-drugs-for-treating-and-preventing-malaria-in-pregnant-and-lactating-women
#42
REVIEW
Makoto Saito, Mary Ellen Gilder, Rose McGready, François Nosten
Malaria in pregnancy and postpartum cause maternal mortality and adverse fetal outcomes. Efficacious and safe antimalarials are needed to treat and prevent such serious consequences. However, because of the lack of evidence on fetal safety, quinine, an old and less efficacious drug has long been recommended for pregnant women. Uncertainty about safety in relation to breastfeeding leads to withholding of efficacious treatments postpartum or cessation of breastfeeding. Areas covered: A search identified literature on humans in three databases (MEDLINE, Embase and Global health) using pregnancy or lactation, and the names of antimalarial drugs as search terms...
November 2018: Expert Opinion on Drug Safety
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30211777/cotransmission-of-malaria-and-hiv-to-infants-of-mothers-coinfected-with-malaria-and-hiv-in-the-haart-era-in-benin-city-nigeria
#43
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ayebo Sadoh, Fidelis E Eki-Udoko
INTRODUCTION: Malaria and HIV are vertically transmitted to infants. In an era where specific interventions are available to reduce the burden of malaria in pregnancy and vertical transmission of HIV, we examined the transmission and cotransmission of HIV and malaria to infants of mothers coinfected with malaria and HIV. METHODS: A cross-sectional analytic study performed on 101 HIV/malaria-coinfected mothers and their infants for whom DNA polymerase chain reaction results were available...
October 1, 2018: Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes: JAIDS
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30116126/respiratory-syncytial-vir%C3%A3-s-infections-in-neonates-and-infants
#44
REVIEW
Yıldız Perk, Mine Özdil
Respiratory syncytial virus is one of the major causes of respiratory tract infections during infancy with high rates of hospitalization and mortality during the first years of life. It is the most common cause of acute bronchiolitis and viral pneumonia in children below two years of age and second the most common cause of postneonatal infant mortality all around the world following malaria. In addition, the virus has been causally linked to recurrent wheezing and associated with pediatric asthma. The respiratory syncytial virus infections tend to be severe in high risk patients such as patients below six months of age, with prematurity, congenital heart diseases, neuromuscular diseases and immune deficiencies...
June 2018: Türk Pediatri Arşivi
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29723168/malaria-surveillance-united-states-2015
#45
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kimberly E Mace, Paul M Arguin, Kathrine R Tan
PROBLEM/CONDITION: Malaria in humans is caused by intraerythrocytic protozoa of the genus Plasmodium. These parasites are transmitted by the bite of an infective female Anopheles species mosquito. The majority of malaria infections in the United States occur among persons who have traveled to regions with ongoing malaria transmission. However, malaria is occasionally acquired by persons who have not traveled out of the country through exposure to infected blood products, congenital transmission, laboratory exposure, or local mosquitoborne transmission...
May 4, 2018: MMWR Surveillance Summaries
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29712656/the-artemisinin-derivative-artemisone-is-a-potent-inhibitor-of-human-cytomegalovirus-replication
#46
JOURNAL ARTICLE
E Oiknine-Djian, Y Weisblum, A Panet, H N Wong, R K Haynes, D G Wolf
Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is a major cause of disease in immunocompromised individuals and the most common cause of congenital infection and neurosensorial disease. The expanding target populations for HCMV antiviral treatment along with the limitations of the currently available HCMV DNA polymerase inhibitors underscore the need for new antiviral agents with alternative modes of action. The antimalarial artemisinin derivative artesunate was shown to inhibit HCMV in vitro yet has demonstrated limited antiviral efficacy in vivo , prompting our search for more potent anti-HCMV artemisinin derivatives...
July 2018: Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29678190/neonatal-and-congenital-malaria-a-case-series-in-malaria-endemic-eastern-uganda
#47
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Peter Olupot-Olupot, Emma I E Eregu, Ketty Naizuli, Julie Ikiror, Linda Acom, Kathy Burgoine
BACKGROUND: Congenital malaria is the direct infection of an infant with malaria parasites from their mother prior to or during birth. Neonatal malaria is due to an infective mosquito bite after birth. Neonatal and congenital malaria (NCM) are potentially life-threatening conditions that are believed to occur at relatively low rates in malaria endemic regions. However, recent reports suggest that the number of NCM cases is increasing, and its epidemiology remains poorly described. NCM can mimic other neonatal conditions and because it is thought to be rare, blood film examinations for malaria are not always routinely performed...
April 20, 2018: Malaria Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29150641/repurposing-of-the-anti-malaria-drug-chloroquine-for-zika-virus-treatment-and-prophylaxis
#48
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sergey A Shiryaev, Pinar Mesci, Antonella Pinto, Isabella Fernandes, Nicholas Sheets, Sujan Shresta, Chen Farhy, Chun-Teng Huang, Alex Y Strongin, Alysson R Muotri, Alexey V Terskikh
One of the major challenges of the current Zika virus (ZIKV) epidemic is to prevent congenital foetal abnormalities, including microcephaly, following ZIKV infection of pregnant women. Given the urgent need for ZIKV prophylaxis and treatment, repurposing of approved drugs appears to be a viable and immediate solution. We demonstrate that the common anti-malaria drug chloroquine (CQ) extends the lifespan of ZIKV-infected interferon signalling-deficient AG129 mice. However, the severity of ZIKV infection in these mice precludes the study of foetal (vertical) viral transmission...
November 17, 2017: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28542123/malaria-surveillance-united-states-2014
#49
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kimberly E Mace, Paul M Arguin
PROBLEM/CONDITION: Malaria in humans is caused by intraerythrocytic protozoa of the genus Plasmodium. These parasites are transmitted by the bite of an infective female Anopheles mosquito. The majority of malaria infections in the United States occur among persons who have traveled to regions with ongoing malaria transmission. However, malaria is occasionally acquired by persons who have not traveled out of the country through exposure to infected blood products, congenital transmission, laboratory exposure, or local mosquitoborne transmission...
May 26, 2017: MMWR Surveillance Summaries
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28463996/first-trimester-artemisinin-derivatives-and-quinine-treatments-and-the-risk-of-adverse-pregnancy-outcomes-in-africa-and-asia-a-meta-analysis-of-observational-studies
#50
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stephanie Dellicour, Esperança Sevene, Rose McGready, Halidou Tinto, Dominic Mosha, Christine Manyando, Stephen Rulisa, Meghna Desai, Peter Ouma, Martina Oneko, Anifa Vala, Maria Rupérez, Eusébio Macete, Clara Menéndez, Seydou Nakanabo-Diallo, Adama Kazienga, Innocent Valéa, Gregory Calip, Orvalho Augusto, Blaise Genton, Eric M Njunju, Kerryn A Moore, Umberto d'Alessandro, Francois Nosten, Feiko Ter Kuile, Andy Stergachis
BACKGROUND: Animal embryotoxicity data, and the scarcity of safety data in human pregnancies, have prevented artemisinin derivatives from being recommended for malaria treatment in the first trimester except in lifesaving circumstances. We conducted a meta-analysis of prospective observational studies comparing the risk of miscarriage, stillbirth, and major congenital anomaly (primary outcomes) among first-trimester pregnancies treated with artemisinin derivatives versus quinine or no antimalarial treatment...
May 2017: PLoS Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28284211/a-systematic-review-of-the-clinical-presentation-treatment-and-relapse-characteristics-of-human-plasmodium-ovale-malaria
#51
REVIEW
Mirjam Groger, Hannah S Fischer, Luzia Veletzky, Albert Lalremruata, Michael Ramharter
BACKGROUND: Despite increased efforts to control and ultimately eradicate human malaria, Plasmodium ovale malaria is for the most part outside the focus of research or public health programmes. Importantly, the understanding of P. ovale-nowadays regarded as the two distinct species P. ovale wallikeri and P. ovale curtisi-largely stems from case reports and case series lacking study designs providing high quality evidence. Consecutively, there is a lack of systematic evaluation of the clinical presentation, appropriate treatment and relapse characteristics of P...
March 11, 2017: Malaria Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27976561/congenital-malaria-importance-of-diagnosis-and-treatment-in-pregnancy
#52
Selvi Gülaşı, Nureddin Özdener
Congenital malaria, in which infants are directly infected with malaria parasites from their mother prior to or during birth, is a potentially life-threatening condition that occurs at relatively low rates in malaria endemic regions. We report an unusual case of a 23-day-old girl with neonatal Plasmodium vivax malaria, suspected primarily on the basis of positive maternal history that her mother had malaria during her pregnancy and was cured with chloroquine therapy. Infant presented with fever, thrombocytopenia and a significant parasitemia...
2016: Turkish Journal of Pediatrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27879554/measles-and-rubella-seroprevalence-among-hiv-infected-and-uninfected-zambian-youth
#53
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Catherine G Sutcliffe, Kelly Searle, Hellen K Matakala, Michelle P Greenman, Kaitlin Rainwater-Lovett, Philip E Thuma, William J Moss
BACKGROUND: Measles and congenital rubella syndrome remain significant causes of morbidity and mortality despite available vaccines. HIV-infected youth may be at increased risk of measles because of greater waning immunity after vaccination. At a population level, they constitute a potentially large pool of susceptibles to measles and rubella. More data among HIV-infected youth in sub-Saharan Africa are needed to guide vaccination policy and control strategies. METHODS: This cross-sectional study was nested within 2 ongoing studies of malaria and HIV in Zambia...
March 2017: Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27824884/the-safety-of-artemisinin-derivatives-for-the-treatment-of-malaria-in-the-2nd-or-3rd-trimester-of-pregnancy-a-systematic-review-and-meta-analysis
#54
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stephanie D Kovacs, Anna Maria van Eijk, Esperanca Sevene, Stephanie Dellicour, Noel S Weiss, Scott Emerson, Richard Steketee, Feiko O Ter Kuile, Andy Stergachis
Given the high morbidity for mother and fetus associated with malaria in pregnancy, safe and efficacious drugs are needed for treatment. Artemisinin derivatives are the most effective antimalarials, but are associated with teratogenic and embryotoxic effects in animal models when used in early pregnancy. However, several organ systems are still under development later in pregnancy. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of the occurrence of adverse pregnancy outcomes among women treated with artemisinins monotherapy or as artemisinin-based combination therapy during the 2nd or 3rd trimesters relative to pregnant women who received non-artemisinin antimalarials or none at all...
2016: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27774886/clinico-hematological-features-and-management-outcome-in-neonatal-malaria-a-nine-years-analysis-from-north-india
#55
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kriti Mohan, B J Omar, Rupa D Singh, Aaradhana, M M Maithani, R N Chaurasia
BACKGROUND: Malaria is an important cause of death and illness in children worldwide. Most cases of neonatal malaria are misdiagnosed because of lack of specific symptoms and general lack of awareness. Nothing much is known in literature about the hematological changes during malaria infection and outcome of disease in neonates. Neonatal malaria is an underdiagnosed entity. So this hospital based observational study aims to assess diagnostic features of neonatal malaria. METHODS: From August 2004 to August 2013, information of all slide positive for malaria cases aged 0 to 28 days admitted to our pediatric hospital was collected and analysed...
2016: Current Pediatric Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27651968/congenital-malaria-due-to-plasmodium-vivax-infection-in-a-neonate
#56
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ravi Bhatia, Dinesh Rajwaniya, Priti Agrawal
Although malaria is endemic in India, congenital malaria is not very common. Congenital malaria is a very rare condition in both endemic and nonendemic areas. We report a case of congenital malaria in a six-day-old neonate with fever and splenomegaly. The diagnosis was picked up accidentally on a peripheral smear examination. Congenital malaria should be kept as differential diagnosis of neonatal sepsis. Timely detection of this condition could lead to early diagnosis and treatment, thereby preventing neonatal mortality...
2016: Case Reports in Pediatrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27326859/efficacy-and-safety-of-azithromycin-chloroquine-versus-sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine-for-intermittent-preventive-treatment-of-plasmodium-falciparum-malaria-infection-in-pregnant-women-in-africa-an-open-label-randomized-trial
#57
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Joshua Kimani, Kamija Phiri, Steve Kamiza, Stephan Duparc, Ayman Ayoub, Ricardo Rojo, Jeffery Robbins, Russell Orrico, Pol Vandenbroucke
BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization recommends intermittent preventive treatment in pregnancy (IPTp) with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) in African regions with moderate to high malaria transmission. However, growing resistance to SP threatens the effectiveness of IPTp-SP, and alternative drugs are needed. This study tested the efficacy, tolerability, and safety of a fixed-dose combination azithromycin-chloroquine (AZCQ; 250 mg AZ/155 mg CQ base) for IPTp relative to IPTp-SP. METHODS AND FINDINGS: A randomized, Phase 3, open-label, multi-center study was conducted in sub-Saharan Africa (Benin, Kenya, Malawi, Tanzania, and Uganda) between October 2010 and November 2013...
2016: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27078816/prevention-and-treatment-of-mother-to-child-transmission-of-syphilis
#58
REVIEW
Serena Braccio, Mike Sharland, Shamez N Ladhani
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Athough more than 90% of syphilis cases are diagnosed in developing countries, syphilis rates in industrialized countries have been increasing since the 1980s. Untreated syphilis in pregnancy is associated with high rates of adverse pregnancy outcomes, including fetal loss, premature birth, congenital syphilis, and neonatal death. We reviewed the recent literature on adverse pregnancy outcomes associated with untreated syphilis and the benefits of early and effective treatment...
June 2016: Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26938139/malaria-surveillance-united-states-2013
#59
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Karen A Cullen, Kimberly E Mace, Paul M Arguin
PROBLEM/CONDITION: Malaria in humans is caused by intraerythrocytic protozoa of the genus Plasmodium. These parasites are transmitted by the bite of an infective female Anopheles mosquito. The majority of malaria infections in the United States occur among persons who have traveled to regions with ongoing malaria transmission. However, malaria is also occasionally acquired by persons who have not traveled out of the country through exposure to infected blood products, congenital transmission, laboratory exposure, or local mosquitoborne transmission...
March 4, 2016: MMWR Surveillance Summaries
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26869377/safety-of-artemisinins-in-first-trimester-of-prospectively-followed-pregnancies-an-observational-study
#60
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kerryn A Moore, Julie A Simpson, Moo Kho Paw, MuPawJay Pimanpanarak, Jacher Wiladphaingern, Marcus J Rijken, Podjanee Jittamala, Nicholas J White, Freya J I Fowkes, François Nosten, Rose McGready
BACKGROUND: Artemisinins, the most effective antimalarials available, are not recommended for falciparum malaria during the first trimester of pregnancy because of safety concerns. Therefore, quinine is used despite its poor effectiveness. Assessing artemisinin safety requires weighing the risks of malaria and its treatment. We aimed to assess the effect of first-trimester malaria and artemisinin treatment on miscarriage and major congenital malformations. METHODS: In this observational study, we assessed data from antenatal clinics on the Thai-Myanmar border between Jan 1, 1994, and Dec 31, 2013...
May 2016: Lancet Infectious Diseases
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