At the end of World War I, British medical officers noted that soldiers infected with malaria were more likely to die during the 1918 influenza pandemic than those without malaria. This synergistic mortality appeared to be specific to Plasmodium falciparum and has not been generally noted since 1920. A possible explanation is that a malaria-induced procoagulant state enhanced the activation of influenza virus to increase inflammation and subsequent severe clinical outcomes. Falciparum proteins bind and likely inhibit antithrombin 3 and other factors. Pathogens interact in ways that may inform pathophysiology studies of remote epidemics
Despite over 100 years of scientific investigation, malaria remains the leading cause of death among...
The two main causes of child mortality and morbidity in Africa are malaria and invasive bacterial di...
Despite over 100 years of scientific investigation, malaria remains the leading cause of death among...
Malaria has been a military problem throughout history capable of causing epidemics that stop milita...
Malaria has a substantial secondary effect on other causes of mortality. From the 19th century, mala...
The global malaria burden, including falciparum malaria, has been reduced by 50% since 2000, though ...
BACKGROUND: It is widely accepted that the shift in case-fatality rate between waves during the 191...
International audienceIn nature, organisms are commonly infected by an assemblage of different paras...
In 1918, two waves of epidemic influenza arose with very different clinical phenotypes. During the f...
Malaria emerges from a disequilibrium of the system 'human-plasmodium-mosquito' (HPM). If the equili...
Malaria can elicit a non-specific immune response against viral, bacterial and other malarial and no...
The 1918 Influenza outbreak is regarded as one of the worst pandemics in human history due to its wi...
The 1918-1919 influenza pandemic was the greatest mortality event in recent history whose specific o...
The pathogenesis of severe malarial disease is not yet fully understood. It is clear that host immun...
In October 1918, an Allied army (Egyptian Expeditionary Force) in Palestine experienced simultaneous...
Despite over 100 years of scientific investigation, malaria remains the leading cause of death among...
The two main causes of child mortality and morbidity in Africa are malaria and invasive bacterial di...
Despite over 100 years of scientific investigation, malaria remains the leading cause of death among...
Malaria has been a military problem throughout history capable of causing epidemics that stop milita...
Malaria has a substantial secondary effect on other causes of mortality. From the 19th century, mala...
The global malaria burden, including falciparum malaria, has been reduced by 50% since 2000, though ...
BACKGROUND: It is widely accepted that the shift in case-fatality rate between waves during the 191...
International audienceIn nature, organisms are commonly infected by an assemblage of different paras...
In 1918, two waves of epidemic influenza arose with very different clinical phenotypes. During the f...
Malaria emerges from a disequilibrium of the system 'human-plasmodium-mosquito' (HPM). If the equili...
Malaria can elicit a non-specific immune response against viral, bacterial and other malarial and no...
The 1918 Influenza outbreak is regarded as one of the worst pandemics in human history due to its wi...
The 1918-1919 influenza pandemic was the greatest mortality event in recent history whose specific o...
The pathogenesis of severe malarial disease is not yet fully understood. It is clear that host immun...
In October 1918, an Allied army (Egyptian Expeditionary Force) in Palestine experienced simultaneous...
Despite over 100 years of scientific investigation, malaria remains the leading cause of death among...
The two main causes of child mortality and morbidity in Africa are malaria and invasive bacterial di...
Despite over 100 years of scientific investigation, malaria remains the leading cause of death among...