Malaria
Information
(from the National
Center for Infectious Diseases)
Malaria is a serious, sometimes fatal, disease caused by a
parasite.
There
are four kinds of malaria that can infect humans: Plasmodium
falciparum, P. vivax, P. ovale, and P. malariae.
Where does malaria occur?
Malaria
occurs in over 100 countries and territories. More than 40%
of the people in the world are at risk. Large areas of Central
and South America, Hispaniola (Haiti and the Dominican Republic),
Africa, the Indian subcontinent, Southeast Asia, the Middle
East, and Oceania are considered malaria-risk areas (an area
of the world that has malaria).
How
common is malaria?
The World Health Organization estimates that yearly 300-500
million cases of malaria occur and more than 1 million people
die of malaria. About 1,200 cases of malaria are diagnosed
in the United States each year.
Most
cases in the United States are in immigrants and travelers
returning from malaria-risk areas, mostly from sub-Saharan
Africa and the Indian subcontinent.
How
do you get malaria?
Humans
get malaria from the bite of a malaria-infected mosquito.
When a mosquito bites an infected person, it ingests microscopic
malaria parasites found in the person’s blood.
The
malaria parasite must grow in the mosquito for a week or more
before infection can be passed to another person. If, after
a week, the mosquito then bites another person, the parasites
go from the mosquito’s mouth into the person’s blood.
The
parasites then travel to the person’s liver, enter the liver’s
cells, grow and multiply. During this time when the parasites
are in the liver, the person has not yet felt sick. The parasites
leave the liver and enter red blood cells; this may take as
little as 8 days or as many as several months.
Once inside the red blood cells, the parasites grow and multiply.
The red blood cells burst, freeing the parasites to attack
other red blood cells. Toxins from the parasite are also released
into the blood, making the person feel sick.
If
a mosquito bites this person while the parasites are in his
or her blood, it will ingest the tiny parasites. After a week
or more, the mosquito can infect another person. Each year
in the United States, a few cases of malaria result from blood
transfusions, are passed from mother to fetus during pregnancy,
or are transmitted by locally infected mosquitoes.
What
are the signs and symptoms of malaria?
Symptoms of malaria include fever and flu-like illness, including
shaking chills, headache, muscle aches, and tiredness. Nausea,
vomiting, and diarrhea may also occur.
Malaria may cause anemia and jaundice (yellow coloring of
the skin and eyes) because of the loss of red blood cells.
Infection with one type of malaria, P. falciparum, if not
promptly treated, may cause kidney failure, seizures, mental
confusion, coma, and death.
How
soon will a person feel sick after being bitten by an infected
mosquito?
For
most people, symptoms begin 10 days to 4 weeks after infection,
although a person may feel ill as early as 8 days or up to
1 year later.
Two
kinds of malaria, P. vivax and P. ovale, can relapse; some
parasites can rest in the liver for several months up to 4
years after a person is bitten by an infected mosquito .
When
these parasites come out of hibernation and begin invading
red blood cells, the person will become sick.
How
is malaria diagnosed?
Malaria
is diagnosed by looking for the parasites in a drop of blood.
Blood will be put onto a microscope slide and stained so that
the parasites will be visible under a microscope.
Any
traveler who becomes ill with a fever or flu-like illness
while traveling and up to 1 year after returning home should
immediately seek professional medical care. You should tell
your health care provider that you have been traveling in
a malaria-risk area.
Who is at risk for malaria?
Persons
living in, and travelers to, any area of the world where malaria
is transmitted may become infected.
What
is the treatment for malaria?
Malaria
can be cured with prescription drugs. The type of drugs and
length of treatment depend on which kind of malaria is diagnosed,
where the patient was infected, the age of the patient, and
how severely ill the patient was at start of treatment.
How
can malaria and other travel-related illnesses be prevented?
-
Visit your health care provider 4-6 weeks before foreign
travel for any necessary vaccinations and a prescription
for an antimalarial drug.
- Take
your antimalarial drug exactly on schedule without missing
doses.
- Prevent
mosquito and other insect bites.
-
Use DEET insect repellent on exposed skin and flying insect
spray in the room where you sleep. Wear long pants and long-sleeved
shirts, especially from dusk to dawn. This is the time when
mosquitoes that spread malaria bite.
- Sleep
under a mosquito bednet that has been dipped in permethrin
insecticide if you are not living in screened or air-conditioned
housing.
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