BackgroundEvidence from sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) regarding risky behaviors among adolescents rema... more BackgroundEvidence from sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) regarding risky behaviors among adolescents remains scarce, despite the large population (approximately 249 million out of 1.2 billion globally in 2019) of adolescents in the region. We aimed to examine the potential influence of depressive symptoms and school-going status on risky behaviors among adolescents in six SSA countries.MethodsWe used individual cross-sectional data from adolescents aged 10–19 based in eight communities across six SSA countries, participating in the ARISE Network Adolescent Health Study (N = 7,661). Outcomes of interest were cigarette or tobacco use, alcohol use, other substance use, getting into a physical fight, no condom use during last sexual intercourse, and suicidal behavior. We examined the proportion of adolescents reporting these behaviors, and examined potential effects of depressive symptoms [tertiles of 6-item Kutcher Adolescent Depression Scale (KADS-6) score] and school-going status on these be...
Extracts obtained from two Nigerian Simaroubaceae plants, Quassia amara L. and Quassia undulata (... more Extracts obtained from two Nigerian Simaroubaceae plants, Quassia amara L. and Quassia undulata (Giull and Perr) D. Dietr were screened for antimalarial properties using a total of six extracts. The plant extracts showed significant antimalarial activities in the 4 day suppressive in vivo antimalarial assay in mice inoculated with red blood cells parasitized with Plasmodium berghei berghei. Plant extracts were studied at 100 mg and 200 mg per kg body weight mouse per day, respectively. At a concentration of 100 mg/kg of mouse, Q. amara leaf hexane extract had the highest suppressive activity with a parasite density of 0.16 9 0.001%. Q. amara leaf methanol extract had an outstanding activity; of 0.05 90.03% at 200 mg/kg. Chloroquine (10 mg/kg, positive control) had a suppressive activity of 0.34 90.02 in the same assay on day 4.
Expression of calcium-binding proteins (Ca² + -ATPase and proteins in the TCTP molecular weight r... more Expression of calcium-binding proteins (Ca² + -ATPase and proteins in the TCTP molecular weight range) was assessed in four isolates and two cloned strains of P. falciparum. Ca² + -ATPase activity was evaluated by monitoring the rate of release of inorganic phosphate at the gamma position of ATP on Corning spectrophotometer model 258 at 820 nm. Kinetic constants of the Ca² + -ATPase protein in two isolates and two cloned strains were evaluated by measuring the activity at various concentrations of ATP. 12% acrylamide SDS-PAGE analysis of the total protein in each of the two cloned strains and two isolates was run to investigate the expression of proteins of low molecular weight range that may include Translationally Controlled Tumor Protein homolog (TCTP) and also to confirm the expression of Ca² + -ATPase with molecular weight estimate of 139 kDa. All the isolates and the cloned strains of P. falciparum exhibited measurable Ca² + -ATPase ** A Non-profit Educational Institution for Research on ENvironmental and Health In Communities of Africa. Website: http://www.enhica.net; E-mail: [email protected]
ABSTRACT In vivo testing of the sensitivity of Plasmodium falciparum to chloroquine was carried o... more ABSTRACT In vivo testing of the sensitivity of Plasmodium falciparum to chloroquine was carried out in 61 falciparum malaria patients with acute symptoms, in Eastern Sudan. In 26 patients (42%), P. falciparum was resistant to chloroquine. Nine patients (15%) had RI resistance, seven (11%) had RII resistance while ten (16%) had RIII resistance. The persistance of parasitaemia and symptoms were highly correlated in patients with RIII responses. In 21 patients in vitro testing of chloroquine sensitivity was carried out simultaneously with the in vivo testing using the World Health Organization microtest. In vivo and in vitro testing were also highly correlated. Isolates from 12 patients with proven in vivo resistance, grew in vitro in the presence of chloroquine concentrations above 0.8 X 10(-6) mol/l blood. Resistant strains have either been spread by refugees across the borders from Ethiopia or have developed indigenously. Mounting drug pressure, mass movement of non-immune refugees and loss of immunity among local inhabitants, due to the drought, are in favour of development of an indigenous focus. Epidemics with intense transmission caused by heavy rains following the drought could have greatly enhanced the emergence and spread of resistant strains.
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1992
The rapid dissemination of chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium falciparum in West Africa has been we... more The rapid dissemination of chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium falciparum in West Africa has been well documented and represents a significant health threat to autochthonous populations. The methodical development of alternative chemotherapeutic agents demands that dispensing new antimalarial drugs (mefloquine, halofantrine, and artemisinin [qinghaosu]) be closely monitored in order to protect their clinical utility. Indeed, mefloquine-resistant strains of P. falciparum have been reported. We present data from experiments in vitro on the innate resistance of I'. falciparum isolates to mefloquine as well as a disturbing observation of transient resistance to artemisinin. The implications for the extended efficacy of these new antimalarial drugs are addressed.
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1990
Intrinsic interactions of calcium antagonists (broadly defined) and quinoline-containing antimala... more Intrinsic interactions of calcium antagonists (broadly defined) and quinoline-containing antimalarial drugs were evaluated against chloroquine-sensitive and chloroquine-resistant clones of Plasmodium falciparum in vitro. Verapamil, D-600 (methoxyverapamil), Ro 1 l-2933/001 (tiapamil analogue), chlorpromazine, SKF 21133-A (chlorpromazine analogue), and diltiazem each potentiated the efficacy of the quinoline-containing antimalarials chloroquine, desethylchloroquine, and quinine with a chloroquineresistant clone of P. falciparum, but did not affect the response of the quinoline-susceptible clone. Similar concentrations of either chlorpromazine or Ro ll-2933/001 lowered the I&o of the resistant clone to approximately the same level as that observed for the sensitive clone for each of the quinolines tested. This reversal of resistance by many of the same calcium antagonists underscores the similarities in one mechanism of multi-drug resistance in neoplastic cells and quinoline-resistance in P. falciparum.
Plasmodium berghei infection was more severe in pregnant than in nonpregnant mice. Infection init... more Plasmodium berghei infection was more severe in pregnant than in nonpregnant mice. Infection initiated on gestation day 7 resulted in rapidly increasing parasitemia and deaths of all pregnant mice within 12 days, while some nonpregnant mice survived until day 21 postinfection. When mice were infected on gestation day 12 or 14, a proportion of mice died before parturition; but some animals survived to deliver living pups. Reduced birthweights and increased spleen weight to body weight ratios were seen in pups from infected mice as compared with pups from uninfected animals. Histopathological abnormalities of placentae from infected animals included degeneration of the normal labyrinthine architecture and thickening of the trophoblast separating maternal and fetal blood vessels.
Background Sub-Saharan Africa faces prolonged COVID-19 related impacts on economic activity, live... more Background Sub-Saharan Africa faces prolonged COVID-19 related impacts on economic activity, livelihoods and nutrition, with recovery slowed down by lagging vaccination progress. Objective This study investigated the economic impacts of COVID-19 on food prices, consumption and dietary quality in Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Ghana, Nigeria, and Tanzania. Methods We conducted a repeated cross-sectional study using a mobile platform to collect data from July-December, 2021 (round 2). We assessed participants’ dietary intake of 20 food groups over the previous seven days and computed the primary outcome, the Prime Diet Quality Score (PDQS), and Dietary Diversity Score (DDS), with higher scores indicating better quality diets. We used generalized estimating equation (GEE) linear regression models to assess factors associated with diet quality during COVID-19. Results Most of the respondents were male and the mean age was 42.4 (±12.5) years. Mean PDQS (±SD) was low at 19.4(±3.8), out of a maxi...
The Malaria Research and Reference Reagent Resource Center (MR4) is a program to support the inte... more The Malaria Research and Reference Reagent Resource Center (MR4) is a program to support the international malaria research community. The primary goal is to improve access to well-characterized quality-controlled parasite, host and vector reagents for standardization of assays and other general research purposes. MR4 is open to all scientists worldwide, however many of its inaugural activities will have a focus in Africa, where the concept for the MR4 was born. Reagents are donated to the MR4 Center by malaria researchers and their institutions for distribution to other investigators special arrangements are also possible for developing reagents in-house, or for coordinating reagents for multi-site studies. In addition to providing reagents, the MR4 also aims to promotoe technology transfer and to foster scientific exchange between new and established malaria researchers. This will be done via workshops, training programs, and dissemination of information (electronic and hard copy)...
Isolates (UCH-23 and OM) and cloned strains of Plasmodium falciparum (Clones W-2 and D-6) were ma... more Isolates (UCH-23 and OM) and cloned strains of Plasmodium falciparum (Clones W-2 and D-6) were maintained in continuous culture for 28 to 150 days using culture media supplemented with 10% (v/v) heat inactivated semi-immune human plasma. Microscopic appearance and growth rates (R) of the parasites in media supplemented with semi-immune human plasma [R = 1. I3 (W-2), 0.92 (D-6), 0.75 (OM) and 0.84 (UCH-23)] were comparable to those of parallel cultures maintained in media supplemented with 10% (v/v) heat inactivated non-immune human plasma [R = 1.42 (W-2), 0.83 (D-6), 0.66 (OM) and 0.89 (UCH-23)]. In addition, IC,, for chloroquine and mefloquine against the two cloned strains of P. falciparum maintained in culture media supplemented with either non-immune human plasma or semi-immune human plasma were identical. Although growth rates of new isolates (UCH-23 and OM) fluctuated over time, they stabilized between the 12th and 19th day of adaptation to culture. This fluctuation in growth rates of the new isolates underscores the influence of population dynamics during adaptation of P. fakiparum to continuous culture. Sixty-eight percent of the primary isolates (170 of 250) obtained from patients in Ibadan were successfully adapted and maintained in continuous culture using semi-immune human plasma. The results of these studies indicate that semi-immune human plasma is a suitable supplement for continuous cultivation and drug susceptibility testing of P. falciparum. This finding will have practical implications in malaria endemic areas where difficulties in obtaining non-immune human plasma or serum limits establishment of continuous culture of P. falciparum and its application in studies on malaria. Key words. Chloroquine, mefloquine, non-immune human plasma, population dynamics, semi-immune human plasma.
African journal of medicine and medical sciences, 2004
In the course of evaluating the contribution of phytomedicine to possible drug discovery of antim... more In the course of evaluating the contribution of phytomedicine to possible drug discovery of antimalarial drugs, an ethnomedical survey of specialized children traditional clinics was done. In the observational multi center study, efficacy of eight different herbal remedies, each consisting of 3-8 ingredients and administered by herbalists were investigated in clients enrolled in the six traditional clinics in Oyo (urban center) and Otu (rural center) of Oyo State, Nigeria. The clients, aged between six months and fifteen years with clinical symptoms of malaria were enrolled in the clinics of the herbalists, as their usual practice. Oral informed consents were obtained from their parents or guardians. Microscopic diagnosis of malaria infection was used to evaluate parasitaemia and validate efficacy of herbal remedies. Results of the analysis showed that, of the 163 clients of the herbalists, only 62 (30 from Oyo, 32 from Otu) had microscopically confirmed P. falciparum infection. Onl...
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1998
The cardiac effects of halofantrine were assessed in 42 children with acute symptomatic uncomplic... more The cardiac effects of halofantrine were assessed in 42 children with acute symptomatic uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria by electrocardiographic (ECG) and clinical monitoring over a period of 14 d. The children were treated with oral halofantrine 8 mg/kg body weight every 6 h for 3 doses. There was significant prolongation of the P-R interval (compared with the pre-treatment value) only at 8 h after drug administration. However, first degree auriculoventricular (AV) block occurred in 2 children at 8 h or 8 and 48 h, and second degree AV block in another child at 48 h. There was significant prolongation of the Q-Tc interval at 8, 16, 24, 48 and 72 h after treatment; the proportions of children with Q-Tc interval > 0.44 s were also significantly higher at all these times except 72 h. Rhythm disturbance was rare. There was no significant ECG change at 168 or 336 h. Despite the ECG abnormalities, there was no clinical symptom. These findings indicate that, in children, the currently recommended dose of halofantrine for the treatment of falciparum malaria may produce serious cardiac side effects.
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1997
Chlorpheniramine, a histamine HI receptor antagonist, reverses chloroquine resistance in Plasmodi... more Chlorpheniramine, a histamine HI receptor antagonist, reverses chloroquine resistance in Plasmodium falciaarum in vitro. However. the clinical sianificance of this remains unclear. We have evaluated the efficacv of chloroquine and a chloroquine-chlorbheniramine combination in 112 consecutive children with acute symptomatic uncomplicated falciparum malaria. There was no significant difference in the parasite and fever clearance times in the 2 treatment groups. However, the proportion of patients in whom parasitaemia increased 24 h after commencement of treatment was significantly higher in the chloroquine group than in the chloroquine-chlorpheniramine group (285% vs. 8.3%,x2=6.61, PcO.01). There was also a higher proportion of children with RI1 and RI11 responses to treatment in the chloroquine than in the chloroquine-chlorpheniramine group but the difference was not statistically significant. The cure rate on day 14 was higher in the chloroquine-chlorpheniramine group than in the chloroquine group. Chloroquine and its combination with chlorpheniramine were well tolerated, the only prominent adverse effect being pruritus, with equal incidence in both groups. Chlorpheniramine reversed chloroquine resistance in vitro in a similar manner to verapamil in isolates of I? falciparum obtained from the patients. Failure of a response in vivo to chloroquine correlated with resistance in vitro in patients treated with this drug. In contrast, all but one patient with isolates which were chloroquine resistant in vitro were successfully treated with chloroquine-chlorpheniramine combination. These data suggest the enhanced efficacy of chloroquine-chlorpheniramine combination in treating acute uncomplicated l? falciparum infection in children from an endemic area of Nigeria.
Chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium falciparum accumulate significantly less chloroquine than suscep... more Chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium falciparum accumulate significantly less chloroquine than susceptible parasites, and this is thought to be the basis of their resistance. However, the reason for the lower accumulation of chloroquine was unknown. The resistant parasite has now been found to release chloroquine 40 to 50 times more rapidly than the susceptible parasite, although their initial rates of chloroquine accumulation are the same. Verapamil and two other calcium channel blockers, as well as vinblastine and daunomycin, each slowed the release and increased the accumulation of chloroquine by resistant (but not susceptible) Plasmodium falciparum. These results suggest that a higher rate of chloroquine release explains the lower chloroquine accumulation, and thus the resistance observed in resistant Plasmodium falciparum.
The increasing spread of chloroquine resistant malaria has intensified the search for new antimal... more The increasing spread of chloroquine resistant malaria has intensified the search for new antimalarial treatment, especially drugs that can be used in combination. Ciprofloxacin (CFX) a fluoroquinolone commonly used to treat bacterial infections has been shown to possess significant antimalarial activity both in vitro and in vivo. Thus efforts in this study were devoted to evaluating the antimalarial activity of combination of chloroquine (CQ) with varying doses (10, 20, 40 80, 160 mg/kg body weight) of CFX in groups of 35 mice inoculated intraperitoneally with 10(7) chloroquine resistant strain Plasmodium berghei ANKA. Parasitological activity and survival of the animals were assessed over 21 days. Parasitemia in non-treated control mice peaked at 78% on day 9 and none survived by day 10. However, the combination of CQ with 160 mg/kg body weight of CFX resulted in a reduction in parasitemia between days 9 and 14 and this was significantly lower than that obtained with CQ alone or CQ combined with the lower doses of CFX (p < 0.05). In addition, the combination of CQ with 160 mg/kg CFX significantly reduced mortality in the infected animals (p = 0.0002) compared with the other treatment groups. The results from this study support the potential usefulness of CFX in combination with antimalarial drugs for the treatment of chloroquine resistant human malaria.
Chloroquine (CQ) resistance in Plasmodium falciparum is associated with polymorphisms in loci on ... more Chloroquine (CQ) resistance in Plasmodium falciparum is associated with polymorphisms in loci on pfcrt and pfmdr1 genes. In this study, we determined the association and linkage disequilibrium between in vivo CQ resistance and P. falciparum polymorphisms in pfcrt gene at codon 76 and pfmdr1 gene at codon 86 in isolates obtained from 111 children with acute uncomplicated falciparum malaria in Nigeria. Patients were treated with standard dosage of CQ and followed up for 28 days. Filter paper samples were collected at enrollment and during follow-up for parasites genotypes and identification of pfcrt and pfmdr1 mutations. Association and linkage disequilibrium between mutant pfcrtT76 and pfmdr1Y86 alleles in pretreatment isolates of P. falciparum was determined. Fifty-five out of the 111 patients (49.5%) failed treatment. Single mutant pfcrtT76 or pfmdr1Y86 alleles were found in 55 out of 111 P. falciparum isolates screened at enrollment. Of these 55 isolates, the mutant pfcrtT76 and pfmdr1Y86 alleles were found in 84%. Both mutant pfcrtT76 (p=0.0196) and pfmdr1Y86 (p=0.000042) alleles were associated with in vivo CQ resistance. In addition, the mutant pfcrtT76 (p=0.047) and pfmdr1Y86 (p=0.006) alleles were significantly selected by CQ in patients who failed treatment. Association analysis between paired single alleles at pfcrt and pfmdr1 loci showed a significant association (p=0.0349 and chi(2)=4.45) between the pfcrt T76 allele on chromosome 7 and the pfmdr1Y86 allele on chromosome 5 and that these two mutant alleles were in linkage disequilibrium (p=0.000, D'=0.64, and r(2)=0.28). Considering the high level of CQ resistance and drug use in the study area, the observed linkage disequilibrium between the mutant pfcrtT76 and pfmdr1Y86 alleles is maintained epistatically through directional CQ selective pressure.
The standard method for in vitro antimalarial drug screening is based on the isotopic assay which... more The standard method for in vitro antimalarial drug screening is based on the isotopic assay which is expensive and utilizes radioactive materials with limited availability, safety, and disposal problems in developing countries. The use of non-radioactive DNA stains SYBR Green I (SG) and PICO green (PG) for antimalarial screening had been reported. However, the use of the two DNA stains for antimalarial screening of medicinal plants has not been compared. Thus, this study compared SG, PG with the [(3)H]-hypoxanthine (HP) incorporation assays for in vitro antimalarial screening of medicinal plants. The 50% inhibitory concentration (IC(50)) values obtained using the three methods for antimalarial activity of medicinal plants and standard antimalarial drugs were similar. Data generated from this study suggests that the non-radioactive micro-flourimetric assay is sufficiently sensitive to reproducibly identify plant extracts with antimalarial activity from those lacking activity. The HP-based assay exhibited the most robust signal-to-noise ratio of 100, compared with signal-to-noise ratios of 7 for SG and 8 for PG. The SG-based assay is less expensive than the PG- and HP-based assays. SG appears to be a cost-effective alternative for antimalarial drug screening and a viable technique that may facilitate antimalarial drug discovery process especially in developing countries.
BackgroundEvidence from sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) regarding risky behaviors among adolescents rema... more BackgroundEvidence from sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) regarding risky behaviors among adolescents remains scarce, despite the large population (approximately 249 million out of 1.2 billion globally in 2019) of adolescents in the region. We aimed to examine the potential influence of depressive symptoms and school-going status on risky behaviors among adolescents in six SSA countries.MethodsWe used individual cross-sectional data from adolescents aged 10–19 based in eight communities across six SSA countries, participating in the ARISE Network Adolescent Health Study (N = 7,661). Outcomes of interest were cigarette or tobacco use, alcohol use, other substance use, getting into a physical fight, no condom use during last sexual intercourse, and suicidal behavior. We examined the proportion of adolescents reporting these behaviors, and examined potential effects of depressive symptoms [tertiles of 6-item Kutcher Adolescent Depression Scale (KADS-6) score] and school-going status on these be...
Extracts obtained from two Nigerian Simaroubaceae plants, Quassia amara L. and Quassia undulata (... more Extracts obtained from two Nigerian Simaroubaceae plants, Quassia amara L. and Quassia undulata (Giull and Perr) D. Dietr were screened for antimalarial properties using a total of six extracts. The plant extracts showed significant antimalarial activities in the 4 day suppressive in vivo antimalarial assay in mice inoculated with red blood cells parasitized with Plasmodium berghei berghei. Plant extracts were studied at 100 mg and 200 mg per kg body weight mouse per day, respectively. At a concentration of 100 mg/kg of mouse, Q. amara leaf hexane extract had the highest suppressive activity with a parasite density of 0.16 9 0.001%. Q. amara leaf methanol extract had an outstanding activity; of 0.05 90.03% at 200 mg/kg. Chloroquine (10 mg/kg, positive control) had a suppressive activity of 0.34 90.02 in the same assay on day 4.
Expression of calcium-binding proteins (Ca² + -ATPase and proteins in the TCTP molecular weight r... more Expression of calcium-binding proteins (Ca² + -ATPase and proteins in the TCTP molecular weight range) was assessed in four isolates and two cloned strains of P. falciparum. Ca² + -ATPase activity was evaluated by monitoring the rate of release of inorganic phosphate at the gamma position of ATP on Corning spectrophotometer model 258 at 820 nm. Kinetic constants of the Ca² + -ATPase protein in two isolates and two cloned strains were evaluated by measuring the activity at various concentrations of ATP. 12% acrylamide SDS-PAGE analysis of the total protein in each of the two cloned strains and two isolates was run to investigate the expression of proteins of low molecular weight range that may include Translationally Controlled Tumor Protein homolog (TCTP) and also to confirm the expression of Ca² + -ATPase with molecular weight estimate of 139 kDa. All the isolates and the cloned strains of P. falciparum exhibited measurable Ca² + -ATPase ** A Non-profit Educational Institution for Research on ENvironmental and Health In Communities of Africa. Website: http://www.enhica.net; E-mail: [email protected]
ABSTRACT In vivo testing of the sensitivity of Plasmodium falciparum to chloroquine was carried o... more ABSTRACT In vivo testing of the sensitivity of Plasmodium falciparum to chloroquine was carried out in 61 falciparum malaria patients with acute symptoms, in Eastern Sudan. In 26 patients (42%), P. falciparum was resistant to chloroquine. Nine patients (15%) had RI resistance, seven (11%) had RII resistance while ten (16%) had RIII resistance. The persistance of parasitaemia and symptoms were highly correlated in patients with RIII responses. In 21 patients in vitro testing of chloroquine sensitivity was carried out simultaneously with the in vivo testing using the World Health Organization microtest. In vivo and in vitro testing were also highly correlated. Isolates from 12 patients with proven in vivo resistance, grew in vitro in the presence of chloroquine concentrations above 0.8 X 10(-6) mol/l blood. Resistant strains have either been spread by refugees across the borders from Ethiopia or have developed indigenously. Mounting drug pressure, mass movement of non-immune refugees and loss of immunity among local inhabitants, due to the drought, are in favour of development of an indigenous focus. Epidemics with intense transmission caused by heavy rains following the drought could have greatly enhanced the emergence and spread of resistant strains.
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1992
The rapid dissemination of chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium falciparum in West Africa has been we... more The rapid dissemination of chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium falciparum in West Africa has been well documented and represents a significant health threat to autochthonous populations. The methodical development of alternative chemotherapeutic agents demands that dispensing new antimalarial drugs (mefloquine, halofantrine, and artemisinin [qinghaosu]) be closely monitored in order to protect their clinical utility. Indeed, mefloquine-resistant strains of P. falciparum have been reported. We present data from experiments in vitro on the innate resistance of I'. falciparum isolates to mefloquine as well as a disturbing observation of transient resistance to artemisinin. The implications for the extended efficacy of these new antimalarial drugs are addressed.
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1990
Intrinsic interactions of calcium antagonists (broadly defined) and quinoline-containing antimala... more Intrinsic interactions of calcium antagonists (broadly defined) and quinoline-containing antimalarial drugs were evaluated against chloroquine-sensitive and chloroquine-resistant clones of Plasmodium falciparum in vitro. Verapamil, D-600 (methoxyverapamil), Ro 1 l-2933/001 (tiapamil analogue), chlorpromazine, SKF 21133-A (chlorpromazine analogue), and diltiazem each potentiated the efficacy of the quinoline-containing antimalarials chloroquine, desethylchloroquine, and quinine with a chloroquineresistant clone of P. falciparum, but did not affect the response of the quinoline-susceptible clone. Similar concentrations of either chlorpromazine or Ro ll-2933/001 lowered the I&o of the resistant clone to approximately the same level as that observed for the sensitive clone for each of the quinolines tested. This reversal of resistance by many of the same calcium antagonists underscores the similarities in one mechanism of multi-drug resistance in neoplastic cells and quinoline-resistance in P. falciparum.
Plasmodium berghei infection was more severe in pregnant than in nonpregnant mice. Infection init... more Plasmodium berghei infection was more severe in pregnant than in nonpregnant mice. Infection initiated on gestation day 7 resulted in rapidly increasing parasitemia and deaths of all pregnant mice within 12 days, while some nonpregnant mice survived until day 21 postinfection. When mice were infected on gestation day 12 or 14, a proportion of mice died before parturition; but some animals survived to deliver living pups. Reduced birthweights and increased spleen weight to body weight ratios were seen in pups from infected mice as compared with pups from uninfected animals. Histopathological abnormalities of placentae from infected animals included degeneration of the normal labyrinthine architecture and thickening of the trophoblast separating maternal and fetal blood vessels.
Background Sub-Saharan Africa faces prolonged COVID-19 related impacts on economic activity, live... more Background Sub-Saharan Africa faces prolonged COVID-19 related impacts on economic activity, livelihoods and nutrition, with recovery slowed down by lagging vaccination progress. Objective This study investigated the economic impacts of COVID-19 on food prices, consumption and dietary quality in Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Ghana, Nigeria, and Tanzania. Methods We conducted a repeated cross-sectional study using a mobile platform to collect data from July-December, 2021 (round 2). We assessed participants’ dietary intake of 20 food groups over the previous seven days and computed the primary outcome, the Prime Diet Quality Score (PDQS), and Dietary Diversity Score (DDS), with higher scores indicating better quality diets. We used generalized estimating equation (GEE) linear regression models to assess factors associated with diet quality during COVID-19. Results Most of the respondents were male and the mean age was 42.4 (±12.5) years. Mean PDQS (±SD) was low at 19.4(±3.8), out of a maxi...
The Malaria Research and Reference Reagent Resource Center (MR4) is a program to support the inte... more The Malaria Research and Reference Reagent Resource Center (MR4) is a program to support the international malaria research community. The primary goal is to improve access to well-characterized quality-controlled parasite, host and vector reagents for standardization of assays and other general research purposes. MR4 is open to all scientists worldwide, however many of its inaugural activities will have a focus in Africa, where the concept for the MR4 was born. Reagents are donated to the MR4 Center by malaria researchers and their institutions for distribution to other investigators special arrangements are also possible for developing reagents in-house, or for coordinating reagents for multi-site studies. In addition to providing reagents, the MR4 also aims to promotoe technology transfer and to foster scientific exchange between new and established malaria researchers. This will be done via workshops, training programs, and dissemination of information (electronic and hard copy)...
Isolates (UCH-23 and OM) and cloned strains of Plasmodium falciparum (Clones W-2 and D-6) were ma... more Isolates (UCH-23 and OM) and cloned strains of Plasmodium falciparum (Clones W-2 and D-6) were maintained in continuous culture for 28 to 150 days using culture media supplemented with 10% (v/v) heat inactivated semi-immune human plasma. Microscopic appearance and growth rates (R) of the parasites in media supplemented with semi-immune human plasma [R = 1. I3 (W-2), 0.92 (D-6), 0.75 (OM) and 0.84 (UCH-23)] were comparable to those of parallel cultures maintained in media supplemented with 10% (v/v) heat inactivated non-immune human plasma [R = 1.42 (W-2), 0.83 (D-6), 0.66 (OM) and 0.89 (UCH-23)]. In addition, IC,, for chloroquine and mefloquine against the two cloned strains of P. falciparum maintained in culture media supplemented with either non-immune human plasma or semi-immune human plasma were identical. Although growth rates of new isolates (UCH-23 and OM) fluctuated over time, they stabilized between the 12th and 19th day of adaptation to culture. This fluctuation in growth rates of the new isolates underscores the influence of population dynamics during adaptation of P. fakiparum to continuous culture. Sixty-eight percent of the primary isolates (170 of 250) obtained from patients in Ibadan were successfully adapted and maintained in continuous culture using semi-immune human plasma. The results of these studies indicate that semi-immune human plasma is a suitable supplement for continuous cultivation and drug susceptibility testing of P. falciparum. This finding will have practical implications in malaria endemic areas where difficulties in obtaining non-immune human plasma or serum limits establishment of continuous culture of P. falciparum and its application in studies on malaria. Key words. Chloroquine, mefloquine, non-immune human plasma, population dynamics, semi-immune human plasma.
African journal of medicine and medical sciences, 2004
In the course of evaluating the contribution of phytomedicine to possible drug discovery of antim... more In the course of evaluating the contribution of phytomedicine to possible drug discovery of antimalarial drugs, an ethnomedical survey of specialized children traditional clinics was done. In the observational multi center study, efficacy of eight different herbal remedies, each consisting of 3-8 ingredients and administered by herbalists were investigated in clients enrolled in the six traditional clinics in Oyo (urban center) and Otu (rural center) of Oyo State, Nigeria. The clients, aged between six months and fifteen years with clinical symptoms of malaria were enrolled in the clinics of the herbalists, as their usual practice. Oral informed consents were obtained from their parents or guardians. Microscopic diagnosis of malaria infection was used to evaluate parasitaemia and validate efficacy of herbal remedies. Results of the analysis showed that, of the 163 clients of the herbalists, only 62 (30 from Oyo, 32 from Otu) had microscopically confirmed P. falciparum infection. Onl...
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1998
The cardiac effects of halofantrine were assessed in 42 children with acute symptomatic uncomplic... more The cardiac effects of halofantrine were assessed in 42 children with acute symptomatic uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria by electrocardiographic (ECG) and clinical monitoring over a period of 14 d. The children were treated with oral halofantrine 8 mg/kg body weight every 6 h for 3 doses. There was significant prolongation of the P-R interval (compared with the pre-treatment value) only at 8 h after drug administration. However, first degree auriculoventricular (AV) block occurred in 2 children at 8 h or 8 and 48 h, and second degree AV block in another child at 48 h. There was significant prolongation of the Q-Tc interval at 8, 16, 24, 48 and 72 h after treatment; the proportions of children with Q-Tc interval > 0.44 s were also significantly higher at all these times except 72 h. Rhythm disturbance was rare. There was no significant ECG change at 168 or 336 h. Despite the ECG abnormalities, there was no clinical symptom. These findings indicate that, in children, the currently recommended dose of halofantrine for the treatment of falciparum malaria may produce serious cardiac side effects.
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1997
Chlorpheniramine, a histamine HI receptor antagonist, reverses chloroquine resistance in Plasmodi... more Chlorpheniramine, a histamine HI receptor antagonist, reverses chloroquine resistance in Plasmodium falciaarum in vitro. However. the clinical sianificance of this remains unclear. We have evaluated the efficacv of chloroquine and a chloroquine-chlorbheniramine combination in 112 consecutive children with acute symptomatic uncomplicated falciparum malaria. There was no significant difference in the parasite and fever clearance times in the 2 treatment groups. However, the proportion of patients in whom parasitaemia increased 24 h after commencement of treatment was significantly higher in the chloroquine group than in the chloroquine-chlorpheniramine group (285% vs. 8.3%,x2=6.61, PcO.01). There was also a higher proportion of children with RI1 and RI11 responses to treatment in the chloroquine than in the chloroquine-chlorpheniramine group but the difference was not statistically significant. The cure rate on day 14 was higher in the chloroquine-chlorpheniramine group than in the chloroquine group. Chloroquine and its combination with chlorpheniramine were well tolerated, the only prominent adverse effect being pruritus, with equal incidence in both groups. Chlorpheniramine reversed chloroquine resistance in vitro in a similar manner to verapamil in isolates of I? falciparum obtained from the patients. Failure of a response in vivo to chloroquine correlated with resistance in vitro in patients treated with this drug. In contrast, all but one patient with isolates which were chloroquine resistant in vitro were successfully treated with chloroquine-chlorpheniramine combination. These data suggest the enhanced efficacy of chloroquine-chlorpheniramine combination in treating acute uncomplicated l? falciparum infection in children from an endemic area of Nigeria.
Chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium falciparum accumulate significantly less chloroquine than suscep... more Chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium falciparum accumulate significantly less chloroquine than susceptible parasites, and this is thought to be the basis of their resistance. However, the reason for the lower accumulation of chloroquine was unknown. The resistant parasite has now been found to release chloroquine 40 to 50 times more rapidly than the susceptible parasite, although their initial rates of chloroquine accumulation are the same. Verapamil and two other calcium channel blockers, as well as vinblastine and daunomycin, each slowed the release and increased the accumulation of chloroquine by resistant (but not susceptible) Plasmodium falciparum. These results suggest that a higher rate of chloroquine release explains the lower chloroquine accumulation, and thus the resistance observed in resistant Plasmodium falciparum.
The increasing spread of chloroquine resistant malaria has intensified the search for new antimal... more The increasing spread of chloroquine resistant malaria has intensified the search for new antimalarial treatment, especially drugs that can be used in combination. Ciprofloxacin (CFX) a fluoroquinolone commonly used to treat bacterial infections has been shown to possess significant antimalarial activity both in vitro and in vivo. Thus efforts in this study were devoted to evaluating the antimalarial activity of combination of chloroquine (CQ) with varying doses (10, 20, 40 80, 160 mg/kg body weight) of CFX in groups of 35 mice inoculated intraperitoneally with 10(7) chloroquine resistant strain Plasmodium berghei ANKA. Parasitological activity and survival of the animals were assessed over 21 days. Parasitemia in non-treated control mice peaked at 78% on day 9 and none survived by day 10. However, the combination of CQ with 160 mg/kg body weight of CFX resulted in a reduction in parasitemia between days 9 and 14 and this was significantly lower than that obtained with CQ alone or CQ combined with the lower doses of CFX (p < 0.05). In addition, the combination of CQ with 160 mg/kg CFX significantly reduced mortality in the infected animals (p = 0.0002) compared with the other treatment groups. The results from this study support the potential usefulness of CFX in combination with antimalarial drugs for the treatment of chloroquine resistant human malaria.
Chloroquine (CQ) resistance in Plasmodium falciparum is associated with polymorphisms in loci on ... more Chloroquine (CQ) resistance in Plasmodium falciparum is associated with polymorphisms in loci on pfcrt and pfmdr1 genes. In this study, we determined the association and linkage disequilibrium between in vivo CQ resistance and P. falciparum polymorphisms in pfcrt gene at codon 76 and pfmdr1 gene at codon 86 in isolates obtained from 111 children with acute uncomplicated falciparum malaria in Nigeria. Patients were treated with standard dosage of CQ and followed up for 28 days. Filter paper samples were collected at enrollment and during follow-up for parasites genotypes and identification of pfcrt and pfmdr1 mutations. Association and linkage disequilibrium between mutant pfcrtT76 and pfmdr1Y86 alleles in pretreatment isolates of P. falciparum was determined. Fifty-five out of the 111 patients (49.5%) failed treatment. Single mutant pfcrtT76 or pfmdr1Y86 alleles were found in 55 out of 111 P. falciparum isolates screened at enrollment. Of these 55 isolates, the mutant pfcrtT76 and pfmdr1Y86 alleles were found in 84%. Both mutant pfcrtT76 (p=0.0196) and pfmdr1Y86 (p=0.000042) alleles were associated with in vivo CQ resistance. In addition, the mutant pfcrtT76 (p=0.047) and pfmdr1Y86 (p=0.006) alleles were significantly selected by CQ in patients who failed treatment. Association analysis between paired single alleles at pfcrt and pfmdr1 loci showed a significant association (p=0.0349 and chi(2)=4.45) between the pfcrt T76 allele on chromosome 7 and the pfmdr1Y86 allele on chromosome 5 and that these two mutant alleles were in linkage disequilibrium (p=0.000, D'=0.64, and r(2)=0.28). Considering the high level of CQ resistance and drug use in the study area, the observed linkage disequilibrium between the mutant pfcrtT76 and pfmdr1Y86 alleles is maintained epistatically through directional CQ selective pressure.
The standard method for in vitro antimalarial drug screening is based on the isotopic assay which... more The standard method for in vitro antimalarial drug screening is based on the isotopic assay which is expensive and utilizes radioactive materials with limited availability, safety, and disposal problems in developing countries. The use of non-radioactive DNA stains SYBR Green I (SG) and PICO green (PG) for antimalarial screening had been reported. However, the use of the two DNA stains for antimalarial screening of medicinal plants has not been compared. Thus, this study compared SG, PG with the [(3)H]-hypoxanthine (HP) incorporation assays for in vitro antimalarial screening of medicinal plants. The 50% inhibitory concentration (IC(50)) values obtained using the three methods for antimalarial activity of medicinal plants and standard antimalarial drugs were similar. Data generated from this study suggests that the non-radioactive micro-flourimetric assay is sufficiently sensitive to reproducibly identify plant extracts with antimalarial activity from those lacking activity. The HP-based assay exhibited the most robust signal-to-noise ratio of 100, compared with signal-to-noise ratios of 7 for SG and 8 for PG. The SG-based assay is less expensive than the PG- and HP-based assays. SG appears to be a cost-effective alternative for antimalarial drug screening and a viable technique that may facilitate antimalarial drug discovery process especially in developing countries.
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