The Scientist : NewsBlog Print: Anti-malarials, from China to Africa
The Scientist: NewsBlog:
Anti-malarials, from China to Africa
Posted by Ivan Oransky
[Entry posted at 26th January 2007 08:30 PM GMT]

Last month, Merrill Goozner reported on the success of artemisinin, in combination with other drugs, to treat malaria in Thailand and China. Reuters reported last week that the Li Guoqian, the first person to use artemisinin in a human trial, now wants to use artemisinin to eradicate malaria on the African island nation of Comoros. (Read Goozner's profile of Li's work here .)

As has been discussed on ProMEDmail, Li probably gets the life cycle of infected mosquitoes wrong (it's 10-14 days, not 30). Commentators also point out that it's somewhat unrealistic to expect that you can wipe out malaria in any given area, even if it's an island, because of air and sea travel. But the project certainly has the potential to dramatically lower the disease burden.

 

Rate this article

Rating: 2.17/5 (6 votes )





artemisinin
by Paul

[Comment posted 2007-05-22 11:18:05]

are carried by boat airplanes or some other means of transportation so eradication is out of the question, but it is known that artemisinin has been used in a different form in ancient China for treating some diseases. The good part is that many people will suffer no more from this and international online pharmacies are helping a lot.





Comment on this blog