As chemoresistance of Plasmodium falciparum to chloroquine has arisen, new ways of combating the infection are needed. Similarities exist between the multidrug resistance of mammalian cells and chloroquine resistance of P. falciparum, based on the occurrence of internucleosomal deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) breakdown and the ability of some anticancer drugs and chloroquine to induce apoptosis. Using chloroquine, oligonucleosomal DNA fragmentation was observed with a sensitive strain of P. falciparum, but not with a resistant one. This suggests that apoptosis may be involved in the action of chloroquine on the parasite.
The effectiveness of galactomannan detection with the Platelia test was evaluated in a prospective study of 3,327 sera from 807 patients. The specificity was 99.6% (748 of 751 cases). For the groups of patients with proven and probable invasive aspergillosis, the sensitivity was 50.0% (17 of 34 cases). The disappointing sensitivity associated with the presence of rare false-positive cases underlines the limits of this test.
The malarial infectivity ofan African village population was tested by selecting a demographically representative sample of individuals for study, regardless of parasitemia or gametocytemia. The infectivity of this population people to laboratory-bred mosquitoes was investigated using membrane feeding techniques. Tests on 322 subjects (greater than
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