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JournalISSN: 0003-4983

Annals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology 

Maney Publishing
About: Annals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology is an academic journal. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Malaria & Population. It has an ISSN identifier of 0003-4983. Over the lifetime, 6359 publications have been published receiving 122626 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that the in vivo tests do provide a valuable indication of the potential use of a compound against drug-resistant malaria parasites of man and of the future value of new compounds against strains of parasites that are already resistant to chloroquine.
Abstract: Data are provided on the activity of a variety of antimalarial drugs against drug-sensitive and drug-resistant lines of Plasmodium berghei in albino mice. Parallel data for the response of the drug-sensitive parasites to these compounds in vitro indicate whether the drugs have a chloroquine-like or quinine-like type of action, or neither. The value of this test system for drug evaluation is debated. It is concluded that the in vivo tests do provide a valuable indication of the potential use of a compound against drug-resistant malaria parasites of man. The tests may also provide a good indication of the future value of new compounds against strains of parasites that are already resistant to chloroquine. Where necessary, steps should be taken to protect promising new compounds.

494 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Projections to 2030 indicate that, although these major vascular diseases will remain leading causes of global disease burden, with HIV/AIDS the leading cause, diarrhoeal diseases and lower respiratory infections will be outranked by COPD, in part reflecting the projected increases in death and disability from tobacco use.
Abstract: Any planning process for health development ought to be based on a thorough understanding of the health needs of the population. This should be sufficiently comprehensive to include the causes of premature death and of disability, as well as the major risk factors that underlie disease and injury. To be truly useful to inform health-policy debates, such an assessment is needed across a large number of diseases, injuries and risk factors, in order to guide prioritization. The results of the original Global Burden of Disease Study and, particularly, those of its 2000-2002 update provide a conceptual and methodological framework to quantify and compare the health of populations using a summary measure of both mortality and disability: the disability-adjusted life-year (DALY). Globally, it appears that about 56 million deaths occur each year, 10.5 million (almost all in poor countries) in children. Of the child deaths, about one-fifth result from perinatal causes such as birth asphyxia and birth trauma, and only slightly less from lower respiratory infections. Annually, diarrhoeal diseases kill over 1.5 million children, and malaria, measles and HIV/AIDS each claim between 500,000 and 800,000 children. HIV/AIDS is the fourth leading cause of death world-wide (2.9 million deaths) and the leading cause in Africa. The top three causes of death globally are ischaemic heart disease (7.2 million deaths), stroke (5.5 million) and lower respiratory diseases (3.9 million). Chronic obstructive lung diseases (COPD) cause almost as many deaths as HIV/AIDS (2.7 million). The leading causes of DALY, on the other hand, include causes that are common at young ages [perinatal conditions (7.1% of global DALY), lower respiratory infections (6.7%), and diarrhoeal diseases (4.7%)] as well as depression (4.1%). Ischaemic heart disease and stroke rank sixth and seventh, retrospectively, as causes of global disease burden, followed by road traffic accidents, malaria and tuberculosis. Projections to 2030 indicate that, although these major vascular diseases will remain leading causes of global disease burden, with HIV/AIDS the leading cause, diarrhoeal diseases and lower respiratory infections will be outranked by COPD, in part reflecting the projected increases in death and disability from tobacco use.

433 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The systematic use of standardized and recently computerized case-report forms, a central international registry at the WHO's headquarters in Geneva, and the use of a geographical information system (GIS) for mapping and monitoring the co-infections have together improved the overall quality of the epidemiological data-gathering.
Abstract: As the AIDS pandemic spreads to rural areas and human visceral leishmaniasis (VL) becomes more common in suburban areas, there is an ever greater degree of overlap between the geographical distributions of the two diseases and, in consequence, an increasing incidence of Leishmania/HIV co-infection. Cases of the co-infection have been reported from 35 countries around the world but most have been recorded in south-western Europe. There has been a total of 1911 cases detected in Spain, France, Italy and Portugal. The incidence of Leishmania/HIV co-infection is expected to continue increasing in eastern Africa but to fall in south-western Europe as increasing numbers of HIV-positives in the latter region are given the new, highly active, antiretroviral therapy (HAART). In 1998, a world-wide network of surveillance for the co-infection, which now includes 28 member institutions, was established by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS). In south-western Europe, the surveillance system is based on 16 institutions and is already well established. The systematic use of standardized and recently computerized case-report forms, a central international registry at the WHO's headquarters in Geneva, and the use of a geographical information system (GIS) for mapping and monitoring the co-infections have together improved the overall quality of the epidemiological data-gathering. All member institutions of the global network report to the WHO on an annual basis. The data collected are then analysed and periodically disseminated through international publications. The GIS allows the relevant epidemiological and demographic data-sets to be integrated and permits all detected cases of co-infection to be mapped down to locality level. The system also allows the spatial distribution of cases to be visualised and analysed and the geographical spread of the co-infection to be monitored over time. The risk posed by co-infected patients, as a source of Leishmania infection for the sandflies feeding on them, has recently been confirmed. The parasites and HIV may also be transmitted as the result of needle-sharing among intravenous-drug users.

372 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The antimalarial activity of quinolone esters was investigated in this article, where the authors found that quinoline esters are antimalarials. But they did not consider the effect of the esters on the antimalariarial activity.
Abstract: (1970). The antimalarial activity of some quinolone esters. Annals of Tropical Medicine & Parasitology: Vol. 64, No. 2, pp. 209-222.

368 citations

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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
201616
20141
20131
201173
201072
200990