When taken once a week to prevent malaria, they should be taken on the same day every week. When taken daily or several times a day to treat malaria, they should be taken at the same time every day.
Some antimalarial drugs should be taken with meals or with milk to prevent upset stomach. Others must be taken with a full glass of water.
Antimalarial drugs are medicines that prevent or treat malaria.
unusual reactions to antimalarial drugs or related medicines in the past should let his or her physician know before taking the drugs again. The physician should also be told about any allergies to foods, dyes, preservatives, or other substances.
Antimalarial drugs may cause lightheadedness, dizziness, blurred vision and other vision changes.
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.
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.
Some antimalarial drugs pass into breast milk. Although no problems have been reported in nursing babies whose mothers took antimalarial drugs, babies and young children are particularly sensitive to some of these drugs.
An aminoquinoline is any of various quinoline derivatives notable as antimalarial drugs.
drugs are wrong and should not be taken.
A bisquinoline is any of a family of antimalarial drugs with a structure involving two quinoline groups in a compound.
These drugs depress the central nervous system and should not be taken with other drugs, such as alcohol, barbiturates, antihistamines, and benzodiazepines that also depress the central nervous system.
An antimalarial is an agent which prevents or counteracts malaria.