A Breakthrough in Malaria Research

Scientists from Scotland have reported a major breakthrough  in fight against malaria.

The team from Edinburgh University in collaboration with  a team in Portugal  have discovered a gene that offers the drug resistance trait to the parasite. Drug-resistant plasmodium falciparum parasites are a major hindrance in the battle against the deadly disease. Chloroquine, the most commonly prescribed medicine against malaria has lost its effectiveness due to the proliferation of chloroquine resistant parasites.

Scientists think this is a  major development in malaria research. Malarial kills one to three million people annually, mostly children. These findings may pave a way for a new class of anti-malarials.

The study has been published in Biomedical Central (Sept 2010)

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By Kwabena A-Manager

Kwabena, is the founder of Give Back Africa Foundation, a non-profit dedicated to helping kids from underprivileged communities realize their potential. He is a scientist in Pharmaceutical Research & Development. To support his charity, please visit http://givebackafrica.org

2 comments

  1. hopefully one day all kids born in africa can at least hope to escape this deadly malaria, there are 2 many problems there goin to face in lide to add this thing. And politicians don’t even make malaria one of thier messages, shame

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