Showing posts with label Malaria Parasite. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Malaria Parasite. Show all posts

Monday, February 8, 2016

PLAGUES & PESTILENCES: Plasmodium Odocoilei - Researchers Discover Native Malaria Parasite In American White Tailed Deer, For The First Time Ever?!

The white-tailed deer is the most abundant and widely studied large mammal in the Americas.
Foxtrot101/iStockphoto

February 8, 2016 - AMERICAS - Two years ago, Ellen Martinsen, was collecting mosquitoes at the Smithsonian's National Zoo, looking for malaria that might infect birds—when she discovered something strange: a DNA profile, from parasites in the mosquitoes, that she couldn't identify. By chance, she had discovered a malaria parasite, Plasmodium odocoilei—that infects white-tailed deer. It's the first-ever malaria parasite known to live in a deer species and the only native malaria parasite found in any mammal in North or South America. Though white-tailed deer diseases have been heavily studied—scientist hadn't noticed that many have malaria parasites.

Martinsen and her colleagues estimate that the parasite infects up to twenty-five percent of white-tailed deer along the East Coast of the United States. Their results were published February 5 in Science Advances.

In hiding
"You never know what you're going to find when you're out in nature—and you look," says Martinsen, a research associate at the Smithsonian's Conservation Biology Institute and adjunct faculty in the University of Vermont's biology department. "It's a parasite that has been hidden in the most iconic game animal in the United States. I just stumbled across it."

The new study, led by Martinsen, was a collaboration with scientists at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute, the American Museum of Natural History, the National Park Service, the University of Georgia, the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee—and UVM biologist and malaria expert Joseph Schall.

Though Martinsen and Schall are quick to note that they anticipate little danger to people from this newly discovered deer malaria, it does underline the fact that many human health concerns are connected to wider ecological systems—and that understanding the biology of other species is a foundation to both conservation and public health management. Zika virus is recently making worrisome headlines and "there's a sudden surge in interest in mosquito biology across the United States," says Schall. "This is a reminder of the importance of parasite surveys and basic natural history."

In 1967, a renowned malaria researcher reported he'd discovered malaria in a single deer in Texas. But the received understanding was that "malaria wasn't supposed to be in mammals in the New World," says Schall, who has studied malaria for decades. "It was like the guy was reporting he saw Big Foot," and no other discoveries were made after that.

But now Martinsen and her colleagues have discovered that the deer malaria is widespread—though it's "cryptic" she says, because the parasites occur in very low levels in many of the infected deer. "Ellen spent days and days looking through a microscope at slides that were mostly empty," Schall says, but eventually found the parasites. Combined with sensitive molecular PCR techniques to understand the genetics, the team confirmed a high prevalence of the disease—between eighteen and twenty-five percent—in sites ranging from New York to West Virginia to Louisiana.

Native species

The new discovery fundamentally changes our understanding of the distribution and evolutionary history of malaria parasites in mammals, Martinsen says. Some scientists wondered if the deer malaria could have jumped from people or zoo animals in the recent past. But the new study suggests otherwise. The team's data shows that the deer actually carry two genetic lineages of the malaria parasites—"probably different species," she says—and that the two lineages are substantially different from each other.

This divergence between the two forms of malaria was used by the scientists as a kind of molecular clock. "We can date the evolutionary split between those two lineages," Martinsen says—to 2.3 to 6 million years ago. Which probably means that when the ancient evolutionary ancestors to white-tailed deer traveled from Eurasia across the Bering Land Bridge to North America in the Miocene, some 4.2 to 5.7 million years ago—malaria came along for the ride. "We think malaria is native to the Americas," Martinsen says, "that it's been here for millions of years."

Malaria is a major problem for people in many parts of the world—and for many species of wildlife too. It has been devastating bird species in Hawaii and Bermuda, among many epidemics. Whether it is hurting white-tailed deer in America is an open question. Martinsen suspects not, because she'd expect to see more obviously sick animals. But Schall wonders if, like some human malaria infections, the disease causes a low-level burden that hurts deer populations. They both agree that it is an area that calls for more research—and that the new study raises many other questions, including whether the parasite might infect dairy cows or other hoofed species.

Ellen Martinsen completed her undergraduate and doctoral training at UVM in Joe Schall's lab and went on to do her postdoctoral research at the Smithonian Conservation Biology Institute's Center for Conservation Genetics. The new discovery drew on a team of scientists and veterinarians at the Smithsonian and other institutions, who studied samples from both live and necropsied deer as well as mosquitoes. Additionally, Martinsen returned to Schall's lab for some of the new research.

"Malaria is a top parasitic disease in humans and wildlife," Ellen Martinsen says. "It's important that we gain a better understanding of its diversity and distribution not just across humans but across other species too."

More information: Hidden in plain sight: Cryptic and endemic malaria parasites in North American white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus)

- Phys.org.



Thursday, September 5, 2013

PLAGUES & PESTILENCES: Huge And "Alarming" Rise In Malaria Cases In Chad - Emergency Operation Underway In The Salamat Region; 12,793 New Cases In LESS THAN A MONTH!

"Many people in our village were attacked by a strange spirit that made them shiver and act in a crazy way.” - Halima Ibrahim, Mother of malaria patient.

September 05, 2013 - CHAD
- An emergency operation is under way in the Salamat region of Chad after an "alarming" rise in cases of malaria.


Malaria parasites infect two blood cells. (Lennart Nilsson / Scanpix).

Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) said the number of reported new cases rose from 1,228 in the first week of August to 14,021 by the end of the month.

Cases of the mosquito-borne disease do peak during the July to November rainy season.

But MSF Health Advisor for Chad Dr Turid Piening said the sudden high spike in this area is unusual.

She said: "More than 80% of people who are coming for consultations are coming because they are infected with malaria, normally its 30%-40% at this time of year.

"It is now the top illness diagnosed in our clinics and that is unusual for this area."

A quarter of all deaths in Chad are attributed to malaria and it is the most common cause of death for children, according to MSF.

Latest available figures from the World Health Organization show more than 650,000 people died around the world from the disease in 2010, most of them children in Africa.

"Strange Spirit"


An MSF team working in the town of Am Timan was alerted to a sharp increase in cases in July by government health officials.

However, this sudden rise has not been officially recognised as an outbreak.

"Many people in our village were attacked by a strange spirit that made them shiver and act in a crazy way," said Halima Ibrahim whose eight-year-old daughter Salimata Ali contracted Malaria.

"My daughter started to shiver, she also complained of a headache and pain in her joints. We prayed but the sickness remained."

MSF doctors came across Salimata before she became too sick to treat. She is now on anti-malaria drugs.


Halima Ibrahim's daughter Salimata Ali contracted malaria.

Dr Piening said despite malaria being one of Chad's biggest killers, most people in Salamat have no access to life saving drugs or simple life saving mosquito nets.

"They are a nomadic population. The best way to protect yourself against malaria is to sleep under mosquito nets, that can stop 60% of the transmission.

"Most people in these areas don't have bed nets. They sleep in the open or in little huts so they are very vulnerable."

The cause of the sudden increase in cases is unclear.

Dr Colin Sutherland, and expert in parasitology at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, said it could be down to a particularly bad rainy reason, and - potentially - more malaria-infected mosquitoes.

He said: "Perhaps there is even something going on in the mosquito population that means there is more around than normal and that means there are additional transmissions going on.

"That would be concerning. It would suggest control measures aren't keeping things in check in that area."

Dr Sutherland said another possibility was that MSF staff had been more effective at dealing with the problem. - BBC.