Many factors determine the virulence of a malaria infection. These include host innate resistance mechanisms and, with Plasmodium falciparum, the ability to cytoadhere to endothelial cells, form rosetts, and induce release of cytokines. The effect on virulence of acquired immune responses can be determined by Class I and Class II MHC-antigens; levels of immunological responsiveness may be determined too in other ways. The structure of parasite surface antigens and their great diversity modulate the immune response and influence parasite survival and hence virulence, and transmission to the vector
The pathogenesis of severe malarial disease is not yet fully understood. It is clear that host immun...
Host-parasite coevolution has been likened to a molecular arms race, with particular parasite genes ...
Malaria, the number one disease in the world, is caused by intracellular protozoans belonging to the...
Many factors determine the virulence of a malaria infection. These include host innate resistance me...
The severe disease and high mortality associated with Plasmodium falciparum infection have tradition...
Coevolution of humans and malaria parasites has generated an intricate balance between the immune sy...
Heterogeneity in parasite virulence is one of several factors that have been proposed to contribute ...
AbstractThe article relates the ability of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum to avoid a pro...
Rosetting is an adhesion property of malaria parasites whereby infected erythrocytes bind to two or ...
Malaria infections induce multiple humoral and cellular responses, most of which are probably not pr...
The blood stage of the malaria parasite's life cycle is responsible for all the clinical symptoms of...
Both antibody dependent and cell mediat-ed mechanisms contribute to immunity in malaria. The parasit...
Many pathogens that either rely on an insect vector to complete their life cycle (e.g., Trypanosoma ...
ABSTRACT Infections with Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax cause over 600,000 deaths each y...
There are seven known species of Plasmodium spp. that can infect humans. The human host can mount a ...
The pathogenesis of severe malarial disease is not yet fully understood. It is clear that host immun...
Host-parasite coevolution has been likened to a molecular arms race, with particular parasite genes ...
Malaria, the number one disease in the world, is caused by intracellular protozoans belonging to the...
Many factors determine the virulence of a malaria infection. These include host innate resistance me...
The severe disease and high mortality associated with Plasmodium falciparum infection have tradition...
Coevolution of humans and malaria parasites has generated an intricate balance between the immune sy...
Heterogeneity in parasite virulence is one of several factors that have been proposed to contribute ...
AbstractThe article relates the ability of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum to avoid a pro...
Rosetting is an adhesion property of malaria parasites whereby infected erythrocytes bind to two or ...
Malaria infections induce multiple humoral and cellular responses, most of which are probably not pr...
The blood stage of the malaria parasite's life cycle is responsible for all the clinical symptoms of...
Both antibody dependent and cell mediat-ed mechanisms contribute to immunity in malaria. The parasit...
Many pathogens that either rely on an insect vector to complete their life cycle (e.g., Trypanosoma ...
ABSTRACT Infections with Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax cause over 600,000 deaths each y...
There are seven known species of Plasmodium spp. that can infect humans. The human host can mount a ...
The pathogenesis of severe malarial disease is not yet fully understood. It is clear that host immun...
Host-parasite coevolution has been likened to a molecular arms race, with particular parasite genes ...
Malaria, the number one disease in the world, is caused by intracellular protozoans belonging to the...