Malaria: A Review

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Neha Kumari Rajesh Kumar Ajeet Pal Singh Amar Pal Singh Prachi Sharma

Abstract

Presentation Malaria is a mosquito-borne irresistible infection of people and other creatures caused by protists (a sort of microorganism) of the class [2] Plasmodium. It starts with a chomp from a tainted female mosquito, which presents the protists through its spit into the circulatory framework, and eventually to the liver where they develop and duplicate. The malady causes indications that regularly incorporate fever and migraine, which in extreme cases can advance to coma or passing. Malaria is far-reaching in tropical and subtropical districts in a wideband around the equator, counting much of Sub-Saharan Africa, Asia, and the Americas. The term Malaria starts from Medieval Italian: mala aria — "terrible discuss"; the infection was once called ague or [3]. bog fever due to its affiliation with swamps and marshland. Malaria was once common in most of Europe and North America, where it is no longer endemic, in spite of the fact that imported cases do happen. Other Plasmodium species cause diseases in certain creatures. A few warm-blooded animals, feathered creatures and reptiles have their possess frame of jungle fever.
Keywords: Malaria, Plasmodium, Bog Fever.

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How to Cite
Kumari, N., Kumar, R., Singh, A. P., Singh, A. P., & Sharma, P. (2024). Malaria: A Review. International Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biological Science Archive, 12(2), 37-43. Retrieved from http://ijpba.in/index.php/ijpba/article/view/482
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