History of malaria
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The history of malaria began before human history, as this ancient disease appears to have evolved before humans appeared on Earth. Similarly, it appears that malaria has infected people for much of human history. The biology of the malaria parasite, and how to treat and prevent malaria have been investigated in science and medicine for hundreds of years. These studies have continued up to the present day, since no effective vaccine has yet been developed and many of the older antimalarial drugs are losing effectiveness as the parasites evolve high levels of drug resistance.
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[edit] Origin and early history
The first evidence of malaria parasites has been found in mosquitoes preserved in amber from the tertiary period that are approximately 30 million years old.[1] Malaria may have been a human pathogen for the entire history of our species.[2] Indeed, close relatives of the human malaria parasites remain common in chimpanzees, our closest relatives.[3] About 10,000 years ago malaria started having a major impact on human survival which coincides with start of agriculture (neolithic revolution); a consequence was natural selection for the genes for sickle-cell disease, thalassaemias, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency, ovalocytosis and elliptocytosis because such blood disorders confers a selective advantage against malaria infection (balancing selection). The three major types of inherited genetic resistance (sickle-cell disease, thalassaemias, and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency) were present in the Mediterranean world by the time of the Roman Empire, about 2000 years ago.[4]
References to the unique periodic fevers of malaria are found throughout recorded history. According to legend, the Chinese emperor Huang Di (Yellow Emperor, 2697-2590 BC) ordered the compilation of a canon of internal medicine. The Chinese Huangdi Neijing (The Inner Canon of the Yellow Emperor) apparently refers to repeated paroxysmal fevers associated with enlarged spleens and a tendency to epidemic occurrence – the earliest written report of malaria.[5]
The name malaria, derived from ‘mal’aria’ (bad air in Italian) was probably first used by Cornaro in a publication of 1440. Malaria was once common in most of Europe and North America. In parts of England, mortality from "the ague" was comparable to that in sub-Saharan Africa today. William Shakespeare was born at the start of the especially cold period that climatologists call the "Little Ice Age", yet he was aware enough of the ravages of the disease to mention it in eight of his plays.[6] Throughout history the most critical factors in the spread or eradication of disease has been human behavior (shifting population centers, changing farming methods and the like) and living standards. Poverty has been and remains a reason for the disease to stay where it went in other places.[7]
[edit] Early research and treatment
The introduction of molecular methods confirmed the high prevalence of Plasmodium falciparum malaria in ancient Egypt.[8] The fourth of the Plagues of Egypt was עָרוֹב (flies, the correct translation is unclear), capable of harming people (Exodus 8:16-28) and Mosquito nets were used in Egypt as early as 2700 BC. The historian Herodotus (484 – 425 BC) wrote that the builders of the Egyptian pyramids were given large amount of garlic, to protect them against Malaria. The symptoms of intermittent fevers were described by Hippocrates (460-370 BC). He related its presence with climatic and environmental conditions and divided the fever into three types: febris tertiana (alternate days), quartana (every fourth day) and quotidiana or continua (now called tropica).[9] Around 168 BC the herbal remedy Qinghaosu came into use in China as antipyretic.
In the 1500s AD, European settlers and slavery are likely to have brought malaria to America. Spanish missionaries found that fever was treated by Indians near Loxa (Peru) with powder from Peruvian bark ( Cinchona succiruba ). There are no references to malaria in the "medical books" of the Mayans or Aztecs. The use of the “fever tree” bark was introduced into European medicine by Jesuitical missionaries (Jesuit's bark). [10] Jesuit Barnabé de Cobo (1582-1657), who explored Mexico and Peru, is credited with taking cinchona bark to Europe. He brought the bark from Lima to Spain, and afterwards to Rome and other parts of Italy, in 1632. Francesco Torti published in 1712 that only “intermittent fever” was amenable to the fever tree bark.[11]
In 1717 the graphite pigmentation of the spleen and brain postmortem was published by Giovanni Maria Lancisi in his malaria text book “De noxiis paludum effluviis eorumque remediis”. He related the prevalence of malaria in swampy areas to the presence of flies and recommended swamp drainage to prevent it.
[edit] 19th century
Pierre Joseph Pelletier and Joseph Bienaimé Caventou separated in 1820 the alkaloids Cinchonine and Kinine (quinine) from powdered fever tree bark, allowing for the creation of standardized doses of the active ingredients. [12]
Meckel recorded in 1848 innumerable black-brown pigment granules in the blood and spleen of a patient who had died in a hospital for insane people. Meckel was probably looking at the parasites of malaria without realizing it; malaria was not mentioned in his report. He thought the pigment was melanin.
An English trader, Charles Ledger, and his Amerindian servant, Manuel Incra Manami, had spent four years collecting cinchona seeds in the Andean region of Bolivia, highly prized for their quinine but a prohibited export. Ledger managed to get some seeds out; in 1865 the Dutch government bought a small parcel, and 20 000 trees of the famous Cinchona ledgeriana were successfully cultivated in Java (Indonesia). By the end of the nineteenth century the Dutch established a world monopoly in the supply of quinine.[11]
Attempts by William Henry Perkin in the 1850s to synthesize quinine in a commercially practicable process were unsuccessful. However, Perkin's Mauve was produced when attempting quinine total synthesis via the oxidation of o-toluidine. Before Perkin's discovery all the dyes and paints were colored by roots, leaves, insects, or, in the case of purple, mollusks. Perkin's discovery of artificially synthesized dyes led to important advances in medicine, photography, and many other fields. In 1891 Guttmann and Paul Ehrlich noted that Methylene blue has a high affinity for some tissue cells and that this dye exerts a slight antimalarial property. Ehrlich advocated a rational development of drugs by exploiting biochemical differences (“magic bullets”).
Scientific studies on malaria made their first significant advance in 1880, when a French army doctor working in the military hospital of Constantine Algeria named Charles Louis Alphonse Laveran observed parasites for the first time, inside the red blood cells of people suffering from malaria. He witnessed the events of exflagellation and became convinced that the moving flagellae were parasitic microorganisms.He therefore proposed that malaria was caused by this protozoan, the first time protozoa were identified as causing disease.[13] For this and later discoveries, he was awarded the 1907 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine. He recognized that the effect of quinine is due to its destruction of the parasites.
In 1885 Ettore Marchiafava, Angelo Celli and Camillo Golgi studied the reproduction cycles in human blood (Golgi cycles) and observed that all parasites present in the blood divided almost simultaneously at regular intervals and that division coincided with attacks of fever. Golgi recognized that the three types of malaria are caused by different protozoan organisms. The protozoan was called Plasmodium by the Italian scientists Ettore Marchiafava and Angelo Celli.[14]
Carlos Finlay, a Cuban doctor treating patients with yellow fever in Havana, first suggested that mosquitoes were transmitting disease to and from humans. However, it was Britain's Sir Ronald Ross working in India who finally proved in 1898 that malaria is transmitted by mosquitoes. He did this by showing that certain mosquito species transmit malaria to birds and isolating malaria parasites from the salivary glands of mosquitoes that had fed on infected birds.[15] Giovanni Battista Grassi showed that human malaria could only be transmitted by Anopheles mosquitoes.[16] Ross received the 1902 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine. After resigning from the Indian Medical Service, Ross worked at the newly-established Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine and directed malaria-control efforts in Egypt, Panama, Greece and Mauritius.[17] The findings of Finlay and Ross were later confirmed by a medical board headed by Walter Reed in 1900, and its recommendations implemented by William C. Gorgas in the health measures undertaken during construction of the Panama Canal. This public-health work saved the lives of thousands of workers and helped develop the methods used in future public-health campaigns against this disease.
[edit] 20th century
In the early twentieth century, before antibiotics, patients with syphilis were intentionally infected with malaria to create a fever. In the 1920s Julius Wagner-Jauregg began to treat neurosyphilitics with induced P. vivax malaria. Three or four bouts of fever were enough to burn up the temperature-sensitive syphilis bacteria (Treponema pallidum). P. vivax infections were terminated by quinine. By accurately controlling the fever with quinine, the effects of both syphilis and malaria could be minimized. Although some patients died from malaria, this was preferable than the almost-certain death from syphilis.[18] Therapeutic malaria opened up a wide field of chemotherapeutic research and was practiced until 1950. Wagner-Jauregg was awarded the 1927 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his discovery of the therapeutic value of malaria inoculation in the treatment of dementia paralytica. [19]
Andersag and colleagues synthesized and tested at the Elberfeld laboratories of the IG Farben (Germany) about 12000 different compounds and succeeded in producing Resochin as substitutes for quinine in the 1930s; it is chemically related to quinine through the possession of a quinoline nucleus. Resochin (a RESOrcinate of a 4-aminoCHINoline) (7-chloro-4-[[4- (diethylamino) - 1 - methylbutyl] amino] quinoline) and a similar compound Sontochin (3-methyl Resochin) were synthesized in 1934 in close cooperation with American companies. There were over 2,000 cartel agreements between IG Farben and foreign firms — including Standard Oil of New Jersey, DuPont, Alcoa, Dow Chemical, Winthrop Chemical Company and others in the United States .[20] The drug was later named Chloroquine. Chloroquine (Resochin) is an inhibitor of pigment biocrystallization and one of the best antimicrobials ever developed. [21] Quinine and chloroquine affect malarial parasites only at stages in their life cycle when the parasites are forming hematin-pigment (hemozoin) as a byproduct of hemoglobin degradation. The drug target is host derived and it took P. falciparum 19 years to build resistance to chloroquine.
The insecticidal contact property of DDT (dichloro diphenyl trichloro- ethane) were established by Paul Hermann Müller at Geigy Pharmaceutical , Basel, Switzerland in 1939. Together with Pyrethrum, which is made from crushed flowers (chrysanthemum cinerariaefolium) , DDT spraying is the standard method of protection against insects. For his discovery of the high efficiency of DDT as a contact poison against several arthropods he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1948. [22] However, the combination of the environmental effects of DDT and the development of resistance among mosquitos has led to a decline in the use of DDT, especially in areas where malaria is not endemic.[23]
In 1949 J.B.S. Haldane suggested that thalassemia heterozygotes may be more resistant to malaria. In November 1949, Linus Pauling, Harvey Itano, S. J. Singer and Ibert Wells published in the journal Science the first proof of a human disease caused by an abnormal protein.[24] Using an Arne Tiselius electrophoresis apparatus , they demonstrated that individuals with sickle cell disease had a modified form of hemoglobin in their red blood cells, and that individuals with sickle cell trait had both the normal and abnormal forms of hemoglobin, which conferred resistants to malaria infections. This was also the first demonstration that Mendelian inheritance determined the specific physical properties of proteins, not simply their presence or absence—the dawn of molecular genetics.
A systematic screening of more than 200 traditional Chinese medical herbs was carried out under the direction of Tu Youyou and her research group in Beijing in 1972. Qinghaosu, later named artemisinin in the West, was low-heat-extracted in a neutral milieu (pH 7.0) from the dried plant Qing-hao according to the intructions of Ge Hong. Ge Hong (284–343) was the first in medical history to recommend the drug qinghao for the treatment of "intermittent fever" in his book „Handbook of Prescriptions for Emergencies“. His recommendation was to soak the fresh leaves and branches of the artemisia herb in cold water overnight, wring it out and ingest the expressed bitter juice in its raw state. The artemisinin molecule contains a peroxide chemical bond, which is believed to be essential to its anti-malarial activity.[25] Artemisinin combination treatments (ACTs) are now first-line drugs for uncomplicated falciparum malaria, but access to ACTs is still limited in most malaria-endemic countries. Improved agricultural practices, selection of high-yielding hybrids, microbial production, and the development of synthetic peroxides will lower prices.[26] [27]
The first successful continuous Malaria culture was established in 1976 by Trager and Jensen, which facilitated the development of new drugs substantially.[28]
The latent or dormant liver form of the parasite (hypnozoite), responsible for the late relapses characteristic of Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium ovale infections, was observed in the 1980s.[29]
[edit] References
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- ^ Reiter P (2000). "From Shakespeare to Defoe: malaria in England in the Little Ice Age.". Emerg Infect Dis. 6 (1): 1-11. PMID 10653562.
- ^ Worrall E, Basu S, Hanson K (2005). "Is malaria a disease of poverty? A review of the literature.". Trop Med Int Health. 10 (10): 1047-1059. PMID 16185240.
- ^ Brier B (2004). "Infectious diseases in ancient Egypt.". Infect Dis Clin North Am.. PMID 15081501.
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- ^ Kaufman T, Rúveda E (2005). "The quest for quinine: those who won the battles and those who won the war.". Angew Chem Int Ed Engl 44 (6): 854-85. PMID 15669029.
- ^ a b Bruce-Chwatt LJ (May 1988). "Three hundred and fifty years of the Peruvian fever bark". Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) 296 (6635): 1486–7. PMID 3134079. PMC:1833449.
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- ^ Biography of Alphonse Laveran. The Nobel Foundation. Retrieved on 2007-06-15. ] Nobel foundation. Accessed 25 Oct 2006
- ^ Ettore Marchiafava. Retrieved on 2007-06-15.
- ^ Biography of Ronald Ross. The Nobel Foundation. Retrieved on 2007-06-15.
- ^ Capanna E (2006). "Grassi versus Ross: who solved the riddle of malaria?". Int Microbiol. 9 (1): 69-74. PMID 16636993.
- ^ Ross and the Discovery that Mosquitoes Transmit Malaria Parasites. CDC Malaria website. Retrieved on 2007-06-15.
- ^ Raju T (2006). "Hot brains: manipulating body heat to save the brain.". Pediatrics 117 (2): e320-1. PMID 16452338.
- ^ The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1927. The Nobel Foundation. Retrieved on 2007-07-28.
- ^ Sutton, Antony C. (1976). Chapter 2: The Empire of I.G. Farben (English). Wall Street and the Rise of Hitler. The Modern History Project.
- ^ Hempelmann E. (2007). "Hemozoin biocrystallization in Plasmodium falciparum and the antimalarial activity of crystallization inhibitors.". Parasitol Research 100 (4): 671-676. PMID 17111179.
- ^ The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1948. The Nobel Foundation. Retrieved on 2007-07-28.
- ^ Sadasivaiah S, Tozan Y, Breman JG (December 2007). "Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) for indoor residual spraying in Africa: how can it be used for malaria control?". Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg. 77 (6 Suppl): 249–63. PMID 18165500.
- ^ Pauling, Linus; Harvey Itano, S. J. Singer, Ibert Wells (November 1949). Sickle Cell Anemia, a Molecular Disease. Science. Retrieved on 2007-08-05.
- ^ Hsu E (2006). "Reflections on the 'discovery' of the antimalarial qinghao.". Br J Clin Pharmacol. 61 (6): 666-670. PMID 16722826.
- ^ White NJ (2008). "Qinghaosu (artemisinin): the price of success.". Science. 320 (5874): 330-334. PMID 18420924.
- ^ Hale V, Keasling JD, Renninger N, Diagana TT (2007). "Microbially derived artemisinin: a biotechnology solution to the global problem of access to affordable antimalarial drugs.". Am J Trop Med Hyg. 77 (6 Suppl): 198-202. PMID 18165493.
- ^ Trager, W; J B Jensen (1976-08-20). "Human malaria parasites in continuous culture". Science (New York, N.Y.) 193 (4254): 673-5. PMID 781840.
- ^ Krotoski W, Collins W, Bray R, et al (1982). "Demonstration of hypnozoites in sporozoite-transmitted Plasmodium vivax infection.". Am J Trop Med Hyg 31 (6): 1291-3. PMID 6816080.