quinine.
Recommended dosage depends on the type of antimalarial drug, its strength, and the form in which it is being used (such as tablet or injection). The dosage may also be different for different people.
An antimalarial is an agent which prevents or counteracts malaria.
Antimalarial drugs are medicines that prevent or treat malaria.
Atovaquone an Antimalarial Drug change its colour when come in contact withMethanolic NaoH.
An annual wormwood is an Asian aromatic herb, Latin name Artemisia annua, which is the source of the antimalarial drug artemisinin.
Antimalarial drugs may cause lightheadedness, dizziness, blurred vision and other vision changes.
High doses of the antimalarial drug pyrimethamine may cause blood problems that can interfere with healing and increase the risk of infection. People taking this drug should be careful not to injure their gums when brushing or flossing their teeth
Antimalarial drugs treat or prevent malaria, a disease that occurs in tropical, subtropical, and some temperate regions of the world.
In laboratory animal studies, some antimalarial drugs cause birth defects.
Babies and children are especially sensitive to the antimalarial drug chloroquine. Not only are they more likely to have side effects from the medicine, but they are also at greater risk of being harmed by an overdose.
"Amino Acid-conjugated Quinolinamines Are Potent Antimalarials." Drug Week (March 12, 2004): 142."FDA Requires Warnings on Anti-malaria Drug Lariam." Consumer Reports (January 2004): 45