Pathophysiological mechanisms in gaseous therapies for severe malaria
Ana Carolina A. V. Kayano, João Conrado K Dos Santos, Marcele F Bastos, Leonardo J Carvalho, Júlio Aliberti, Fabio T. M. Costa
ARTIGO
Inglês
Over 200 million people worldwide suffer from malaria every year, a disease that causes 584,000 deaths annually. In recent years, significant improvements have been achieved on the treatment of severe malaria, with intravenous artesunate proving superior to quinine. However, mortality remains high...
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Over 200 million people worldwide suffer from malaria every year, a disease that causes 584,000 deaths annually. In recent years, significant improvements have been achieved on the treatment of severe malaria, with intravenous artesunate proving superior to quinine. However, mortality remains high at 8% in children and 15% in adults in clinical trials, and even worse in the case of cerebral malaria (18% and 30%, respectively). Moreover, some individuals who do not succumb to severe malaria present long-term cognitive deficits. These observations indicate that strategies focused only on parasite killing fail to prevent neurological complications and deaths associated with severe malaria, possibly because clinical complications are associated in part with a cerebrovascular dysfunction. Consequently, different adjunctive therapies aimed at modulating malaria pathophysiological processes are currently being tested. However, none of these therapies has shown unequivocal evidence in improving patients’ clinical status. Recently, key studies have shown that gaseous therapies based mainly on nitric oxide (NO), carbon monoxide (CO) and hyperbaric (pressurized) oxygen (HBO) alter vascular endothelium dysfunction and modulate host immune response to infection. Considering gaseous administration as a promising adjunctive treatment against severe malaria cases, we review here the pathophysiological mechanisms and the immunological aspects of such therapies.
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CONSELHO NACIONAL DE DESENVOLVIMENTO CIENTÍFICO E TECNOLÓGICO - CNPQ
FUNDAÇÃO DE AMPARO À PESQUISA DO ESTADO DE SÃO PAULO - FAPESP
2012/16525-2
Fechado
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1128/IAI.01404-15
Texto completo: https://iai.asm.org/content/84/4/874
Pathophysiological mechanisms in gaseous therapies for severe malaria
Ana Carolina A. V. Kayano, João Conrado K Dos Santos, Marcele F Bastos, Leonardo J Carvalho, Júlio Aliberti, Fabio T. M. Costa
Pathophysiological mechanisms in gaseous therapies for severe malaria
Ana Carolina A. V. Kayano, João Conrado K Dos Santos, Marcele F Bastos, Leonardo J Carvalho, Júlio Aliberti, Fabio T. M. Costa
Fontes
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Infection and Immunity (Fonte avulsa) |