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Pamela S. Patterson

Researcher at Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Publications -  7
Citations -  236

Pamela S. Patterson is an academic researcher from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The author has contributed to research in topics: Midgut & Malaria. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 7 publications receiving 232 citations.

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Anti-mosquito midgut antibodies block development of plasmodium falciparum and plasmodium vivax in multiple species of anopheles mosquitoes and reduce vector fecundity and survivorship

TL;DR: The results reveal that mosquito midgut-based antibodies have the potential to reduce malaria transmission in a synergistic manner by lowering both vector competence, through transmission-blocking effects on parasite development, and vector abundance, by decreasing mosquito survivorship and egg laying capacity.
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Sulfated polyanions inhibit invasion of erythrocytes by plasmodial merozoites and cytoadherence of endothelial cells to parasitized erythrocytes.

TL;DR: It is suggested that sulfated polyanions inhibit the invasion of erythrocytes by merozoites and cytoadherence of PRBC to endothelial cells by increasing negative repulsive charge and sterically interfering with the ligand-receptor interaction after binding to target cells.
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Role of eicosanoids in the pathogenesis of murine cerebral malaria.

TL;DR: It is suggested that prostaglandins are protective whereas leukotrienes are detrimental in cerebral malaria, and aspirin-treated infected mice had higher serum leukaemia B4 levels than untreated infected mice.
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Influence of adjuvants on murine immune responses against the C‐terminal 19 kDa fragment of Plasmodium vivax merozoite surface protein‐1 (MSP‐1)

TL;DR: Antibody titres against merozoites increased in all groups after the parasite antigen boost, and IgG2a levels in the group that received antigen in P1005 plus RaLPS in the W/O emulsion were higher than those receiving Freund's, alum or the other copolymer adjuvants.