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Malaria: mechanisms of erythrocytic infection and pathological correlates of severe disease.

TitleMalaria: mechanisms of erythrocytic infection and pathological correlates of severe disease.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2007
AuthorsHaldar, K, Murphy, SC, Milner, DA, Taylor, TE
JournalAnnu Rev Pathol
Volume2
Pagination217-49
Date Published2007
ISSN1553-4006
KeywordsAnimals, Child, Child Mortality, Child, Preschool, Erythrocytes, Host-Parasite Interactions, Humans, Infant, Malaria, Cerebral, Plasmodium falciparum, Survival Rate
Abstract

Malaria is an ancient disease that continues to cause enormous human morbidity and mortality. The life cycle of the causative parasite involves multiple tissues in two distinct host organisms, mosquitoes and humans. However, all the clinical symptoms of malaria are a consequence of infection of human erythrocytes. An understanding of the basic mechanisms that govern parasite invasion, remodeling, growth, and reinvasion of erythrocytes and the complex events leading to tissue pathology may yield new diagnostics and treatments for malaria. This approach is revealing a more complete picture of the most serious syndrome associated with this infection-cerebral malaria. We focus on the most recent understanding of the molecular basis of infection, summarize our finding from an ongoing pediatric cerebral malaria autopsy study in Malawi, and integrate these insights to malarial pathology.

DOI10.1146/annurev.pathol.2.010506.091913
Alternate JournalAnnu Rev Pathol
PubMed ID18039099