Disease | malaria |
Symptom | |infection |
Sentences | 260 |
PubMedID- 25852576 | Mice deficient for cd37 are more susceptible to infection with murine malaria (gartlan et al., 2010) and fail to reject syngeneic tumor cells transfected to express a foreign antigen (gartlan et al., 2013). |
PubMedID- 24146884 | Interestingly, midgut expression of a. gambiae cpkc (agap012252) was reported to increase during blood meal digestion and during infection with the mouse malaria parasite plasmodium berghei. |
PubMedID- 21842385 | The total number of activated cd4+ t cells significantly increased during malaria in animals with a long-term infection, which remained at least 3 months after the termination of malaria. |
PubMedID- 21291597 | Neonates are assumed to be able to counteract natural infection with malaria because of the predominance of fetal hemoglobin, which is not suitable for complete erythrocyte schizogony of p. falciparum (14). |
PubMedID- 23698008 | The majority of evidence for behavioural alteration following infection with malaria focuses on ‘at-host’ foraging activities. |
PubMedID- 26428451 | Despite a century of research focused on the development and implementation of effective control strategies, infection with the malaria parasite continues to result in significant morbidity and mortality worldwide. |
PubMedID- 24996199 | infection with malaria parasites has imposed a strong selective pressure on the human genome, promoting the convergent evolution of a diverse range of genetic adaptations, many of which are harboured by the red blood cell, which hosts the pathogenic stage of the plasmodium life cycle. |
PubMedID- 24042114 | However, we and others have observed that tlr9(-/-) mice, in contrast to mice deficient in the downstream adaptor, myeloid differentiation primary response gene 88 (myd88), exhibit few deficiencies in immune function during early infection with the malaria parasite plasmodium chabaudi, implying that another myd88-dependent receptor also contributes to the antimalarial response. |
PubMedID- 21858127 | The enhancement of hiv replication generated by infection with malaria, which supports higher hiv infectivity in co-infected individuals , is produced by the presence of any parasitaemia, and not only during clinical episodes . |
PubMedID- 24305630 | Inclusion criteria were age above 14 years, uncomplicated mono-infection with p. falciparum malaria, parasite densities up to 100,000/μl and informed consent by the patient or the legal representative when appropriate. |