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Qu'est-ce (qui) est malaria$46410$ - définition

BIRDS DISEASE
Bird malaria; Poultry malaria; Chicken malaria; Malaria in poultry; Malaria parasite of birds

Airport malaria         
  • Luggage compartments in an Airbus
  • Malaria geographic distribution 2003
  • access-date=1 April 2020}}</ref>
OCCURS WHEN A MALARIA INFECTED FEMALE ANOPHELES MOSQUITO TRAVELS BY AIRCRAFT FROM A COUNTRY WHERE MALARIA IS COMMON
Suitcase malaria; Luggage malaria; Baggage malaria
Airport malaria, sometimes known as baggage, luggage or suitcase malaria, occurs when a malaria infected female Anopheles mosquito travels by aircraft from a country where malaria is common, arrives in a country where malaria is usually not found, and bites a person at or around the vicinity of the airport, or if the climate is suitable, travels in luggage and bites a person further away. The infected person usually presents with a fever in the absence of a recent travel history.
Malaria         
  • An advertisement for [[quinine]] as a malaria treatment from 1927.
  • World War II poster
  • gold standard]] for malaria diagnosis.
  • An ''[[Anopheles stephensi]]'' mosquito shortly after obtaining blood from a human (the droplet of blood is expelled as a surplus). This mosquito is a vector of malaria, and mosquito control is an effective way of reducing its incidence.
  • ''Artemisia annua'', source of the antimalarial drug [[artemisinin]]
  • script]])
  • U.S. Marines with malaria in a field hospital on [[Guadalcanal]], October 1942
  • 1962 Pakistani postage stamp promoting malaria eradication program
  • The life cycle of malaria parasites. Sporozoites are introduced by a mosquito bite. They migrate to the liver, where they multiply into thousands of merozoites. The merozoites infect red blood cells and replicate, infecting more and more red blood cells. Some parasites form gametocytes, which are taken up by a mosquito, continuing the life cycle.
  • Video recording of a set of presentations given in 2010 about humanity's efforts towards malaria eradication
  • Child with malaria in [[Ethiopia]]
  • Ancient malaria oocysts preserved in [[Dominican amber]]
  • 950–1,358}}{{refend}}
  •    ≥3500}}
{{div col end}}
  • Man spraying kerosene oil in standing water, [[Panama Canal Zone]], 1912
  • [[Micrograph]] of a [[placenta]] from a [[stillbirth]] due to maternal malaria. [[H&E stain]]. Red blood cells are anuclear; blue/black staining in bright red structures (red blood cells) indicate foreign nuclei from the parasites.
  • Members of the Malaria Commission of the [[League of Nations]] collecting larvae on the [[Danube delta]], 1929
  • Walls where indoor residual spraying of DDT has been applied. The mosquitoes remain on the wall until they fall down dead on the floor.
  • A mosquito net in use.
  • Ring-forms and [[gametocyte]]s of ''Plasmodium falciparum'' in human blood
  • Electron micrograph of a ''Plasmodium falciparum''-infected red blood cell (center), illustrating adhesion protein "knobs"
  •  url=https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/eutils/elink.fcgi?dbfrom=pubmed&tool=sumsearch.org/cite&retmode=ref&cmd=prlinks&id=27777030  }}</ref>
  • British doctor [[Ronald Ross]] received the [[Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine]] in 1902 for his work on malaria.
  • Malaria clinic in Tanzania
  • Main symptoms of malaria<ref name="PPID 2010"/>
  • Chinese medical researcher [[Tu Youyou]] received the [[Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine]] in 2015 for her work on the antimalarial drug [[artemisinin]].
  • Past and current malaria prevalence in 2009
MOSQUITO-BORNE INFECTIOUS DISEASE
Malariology; Malarial; Vivax malaria; Falciparum malaria; Falciform malaria; Malaria paroxysms; Cerebral malaria; Malarial fever; Malaria, cerebral; Malaria prevention; Malaria infection; Maleria; Marsh fevers; Malarias; Pernicious fever; Fever and ague; Malariologist; Paludism; Malarious fever; Tertian fever; Swamp malaria; Tertian malaria; Severe malaria; Congestive fever; Eradication of malaria; Uncomplicated malaria; Economic impact of malaria; Prevention of malaria; Malaria eradication; Global Malaria Eradication Programme; Global Malaria Eradication Program
·noun Air infected with some noxious substance capable of engendering disease; ·esp., an unhealthy exhalation from certain soils, as marshy or wet lands, producing fevers; miasma.
II. Malaria ·noun A morbid condition produced by exhalations from decaying vegetable matter in contact with moisture, giving rise to fever and ague and many other symptoms characterized by their tendency to recur at definite and usually uniform intervals.
malaria         
  • An advertisement for [[quinine]] as a malaria treatment from 1927.
  • World War II poster
  • gold standard]] for malaria diagnosis.
  • An ''[[Anopheles stephensi]]'' mosquito shortly after obtaining blood from a human (the droplet of blood is expelled as a surplus). This mosquito is a vector of malaria, and mosquito control is an effective way of reducing its incidence.
  • ''Artemisia annua'', source of the antimalarial drug [[artemisinin]]
  • script]])
  • U.S. Marines with malaria in a field hospital on [[Guadalcanal]], October 1942
  • 1962 Pakistani postage stamp promoting malaria eradication program
  • The life cycle of malaria parasites. Sporozoites are introduced by a mosquito bite. They migrate to the liver, where they multiply into thousands of merozoites. The merozoites infect red blood cells and replicate, infecting more and more red blood cells. Some parasites form gametocytes, which are taken up by a mosquito, continuing the life cycle.
  • Video recording of a set of presentations given in 2010 about humanity's efforts towards malaria eradication
  • Child with malaria in [[Ethiopia]]
  • Ancient malaria oocysts preserved in [[Dominican amber]]
  • 950–1,358}}{{refend}}
  •    ≥3500}}
{{div col end}}
  • Man spraying kerosene oil in standing water, [[Panama Canal Zone]], 1912
  • [[Micrograph]] of a [[placenta]] from a [[stillbirth]] due to maternal malaria. [[H&E stain]]. Red blood cells are anuclear; blue/black staining in bright red structures (red blood cells) indicate foreign nuclei from the parasites.
  • Members of the Malaria Commission of the [[League of Nations]] collecting larvae on the [[Danube delta]], 1929
  • Walls where indoor residual spraying of DDT has been applied. The mosquitoes remain on the wall until they fall down dead on the floor.
  • A mosquito net in use.
  • Ring-forms and [[gametocyte]]s of ''Plasmodium falciparum'' in human blood
  • Electron micrograph of a ''Plasmodium falciparum''-infected red blood cell (center), illustrating adhesion protein "knobs"
  •  url=https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/eutils/elink.fcgi?dbfrom=pubmed&tool=sumsearch.org/cite&retmode=ref&cmd=prlinks&id=27777030  }}</ref>
  • British doctor [[Ronald Ross]] received the [[Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine]] in 1902 for his work on malaria.
  • Malaria clinic in Tanzania
  • Main symptoms of malaria<ref name="PPID 2010"/>
  • Chinese medical researcher [[Tu Youyou]] received the [[Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine]] in 2015 for her work on the antimalarial drug [[artemisinin]].
  • Past and current malaria prevalence in 2009
MOSQUITO-BORNE INFECTIOUS DISEASE
Malariology; Malarial; Vivax malaria; Falciparum malaria; Falciform malaria; Malaria paroxysms; Cerebral malaria; Malarial fever; Malaria, cerebral; Malaria prevention; Malaria infection; Maleria; Marsh fevers; Malarias; Pernicious fever; Fever and ague; Malariologist; Paludism; Malarious fever; Tertian fever; Swamp malaria; Tertian malaria; Severe malaria; Congestive fever; Eradication of malaria; Uncomplicated malaria; Economic impact of malaria; Prevention of malaria; Malaria eradication; Global Malaria Eradication Programme; Global Malaria Eradication Program
n.
1) to come down with, develop malaria
2) to eradicate, stamp out malaria

Wikipédia

Avian malaria

Avian malaria is a parasitic disease of birds, caused by parasite species belonging to the genera Plasmodium and Hemoproteus (phylum Apicomplexa, class Haemosporidia, family Plasmoiidae). The disease is transmitted by a dipteran vector including mosquitoes in the case of Plasmodium parasites and biting midges for Hemoproteus. The range of symptoms and effects of the parasite on its bird hosts is very wide, from asymptomatic cases to drastic population declines due to the disease, as is the case of the Hawaiian honeycreepers. The diversity of parasites is large, as it is estimated that there are approximately as many parasites as there are species of hosts. Co-speciation and host switching events have contributed to the broad range of hosts that these parasites can infect, causing avian malaria to be a widespread global disease, found everywhere except Antarctica.