The parasites enter the body by way of a cut or via the eyes or mouth
mosquitos
Anopheles mosquito carries the parasite of malaria. When they bite human beings these parasites enter into their body cause malaria.
when female anopheles mosquito take a blood meal from a host with malaria, the mosquitoe took the malaria bacteria's gametes with the blood meal. the gamestes fused together in the mosquitoe's gut forming the infected stage. if the mosquito then bit a non infected human host, the infected stage of the bacteria will enter the bloodstream vai the salivary gland of the mosquito.
No the parasites have no cilia.
No, they do not! The evidence shows that malaria parasites that infect lizards have two kinds of ribosomes and malaria parasites that infect lizards have only one.
Human and animals
malaria
Human and animals
A person gets malaria from the bite of an infected female mosquito. The mosquito bite injects young forms of the malaria parasite into the person's blood. The parasites travel through the person's bloodstream to the liver, where they grow to their next stage of development. In 6 to 9 days, the parasites leave the liver and enter the bloodstream again. They invade the red blood cells, finish growing, and begin to multiply quickly. The number of parasites increases until the red blood cells burst, releasing thousands of parasites into the person's bloodstream. The parasites attack other red blood cells, and the cycle of infection continues, causing the common signs and symptoms of malaria. When a non-infected mosquito bites an infected person, the mosquito sucks up parasites from the person's blood. The mosquito is then infected with the malaria parasites. The parasites go through several stages of growth in the mosquito. When the mosquito bites someone else, that person will become infected with malaria parasites, and the cycle will begin again. Malaria parasites can also be transmitted by transfusion of blood from an infected person or by the use of needles or syringes contaminated with the blood of an infected person.
No, pubic lice are ectoparasites; they live on the outside of the body.
When the infected anopheles mosquito bite the uninfected host, it transmits the the malaria parasite in the blood of the host. This parasite soon enters the liver. They multiply there. When the liver cell burst, the parasites enter the red blood cells. There again they multiply. Then the red blood cells burst, the parasites are liberated. They invade the fresh red blood cells. This process go on repeating. Every time the parasites are liberated from the red blood cells, you get bouts of fever with chills. When the mosquito bites the patient, it sucks the parasites. They travel to the salivary gland of the mosquito to give infection to new hosts.
Yes. Human body respond to malaria.Body tries to kill the malaria parasite by high grade fever. By the way the syphilis causing bacteria is killed by this high temperature. Body forms the humeral antibodies against the malaria parasites. There is enlargement of liver and spleen. Spleen can enlarge enormously.
Malaria parasites become resistant to drugs used to treat them. Also the mosquitoes which carry the parasites also become resistant to insecticide drugs which are used to kill them. This process is occurring in malaria hotspots worldwide.