The hypnozoite and relapse in primate malaria

Author:

Cogswell F B1

Affiliation:

1. Tulane Regional Primate Research Center, Covington, Louisiana 70433.

Abstract

Although the phenomenon of malarial relapse was known to the ancients, the mechanism has only recently been explained satisfactorily. The long-held hypothesis of a tissue "cycle" in primate malaria as a cause of relapse did not fit clinical and experimental observations. A latent stage for Plasmodium spp. in the liver, for which there is now extensive morphological and experimental confirmation, best explains both the relapse phenomenon and the long prepatent periods seen with some strains of Plasmodium vivax. These latent stages (hypnozoites) have been detected in three relapsing malarias and have been found to persist in the liver as uninucleate parasites for up to 229 days after sporozoite inoculation. They have been found in in vitro cultures of two species of Plasmodium, and their ultrastructure has been partially described.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical),Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Immunology and Microbiology,Epidemiology

Reference87 articles.

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2. Como si prendono la febbri malariche. Recerche speriment;Bignami A.;Bull. R. Acad. (Roma),1898

3. Sulla inoculazione delle sangue di semiluna malariche d'uomo;Bignami A.;Atti Soc. Studi Malar.,1900

4. The response of Plasmodium vivax to antifols;Bray R. S.;Trans. R. Soc. Trop. Med. Hyg.,1984

5. Observations on early and late post-sporozoite tissue stages in primate malaria. III. Further attempts to find early forms and to correlate hypnozoites with growing exo-erythrocytic schizonts and parasitaemic relapses in Plasmodium cynomolgi bastianelli infections;Bray R. S.;Trans. R. Soc. Trop. Med. Hyg.,1985

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