Plasmodium falciparum
Etiology/Bacteriology
Taxonomy
| Domain = Eukarya | Kingdom = Chromalveolata | Phylum = Apicomplexa | Class = Aconoidasida | Order = Haemosporida | Family = Plasmodiidae | Genus = Plasmodium | Species = P. falciparum
Description
Pathogenesis
Transmission
Transmission of P. falciparum occurs between humans and Anopheles mosquitos. Malaria is passed by vectors such as Anopheles gambiae, Anopheles albimanus, Anopheles freebomi, Anopheles maculatus, and Anopheles stephensi which transfer from host to host. The parasite can infect the mosquitos through the in take of human blood or a human by the mosquitos injection of saliva into the human. Once the mosquito becomes infected with Plasmodium falciparum it transfers the disease to each new host it penetrates. Humans can rarely transfer the parasite between each other. There have been rare cases of contaminated transfused blood infecting the recipient, but seldom does this occur because of screening that takes place pre-blood donation. Mothers can also pass P. falciparum to their child during birth, this is also a seldom occurrence.
Infectious Dose, Incubation, Colonization
Symptoms of Malaria typically begin 8-25 days following infection, in few cases it can take up to a year. The late onset of incubation is due to taking an inadequate amount of anti-malaria medication. The infectious dose is not precisely known, but it is understood to be a very low number. Malaria can be observed months to years after first set of symptoms are observed. This is due to the parasites ability to lie dormant in liver cells until the environment is right for a relapse. This is mainly seen in P.vivax and P. ovale, other strains of Malaria, rather then P. falciparum. The parasite colonizes in the liver and is then released into the blood stream and attached to erythrocytes.
Epidemiology
Virulence Factors
Clinical features
Symptoms
Morbidity and Mortality
Diagnosis
Treatment
Prevention
Risk Avoidance
Immunization
Host Immune Response
References
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