Get a maleria injection or take tablets
Malaria is caused by four species from the genus Plasmodium. Plasmodium is a protozoa. This protozoa forms male and female gametes in the blood of the patient of malaria. Which are sucked by female anopheles mosquito. The parasite complete the sexual cycle in the body of mosquito. This mosquito injects the sporozoites in the body of next victims to give them malaria.
malaria is caused by four species from the genus Plasmodium. Plasmodium is a protozoa. This protozoa forms male and female gametes in the blood of the patient of malaria. Which are sucked by female anopheles mosquito. The parasite complete the sexual cycle in the body of mosquito. This mosquito injects the sporozoites in the body of next victims to give them malaria.
Malaria is called as parasitic disease which is caused due to the infection or Protozoan known as PLASMODIUM and is a parasite or it complete its life cycle on two hosts female anaphilis (mosquito) and man
Malaria parasites undergo sexual reproduction in the mosquito vector. When a mosquito bites an infected person, it ingests male and female gametocytes. These gametocytes fuse in the mosquito gut to form zygotes, which eventually develop into sporozoites, restarting the cycle of transmission.
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.
Malaria parasites divide in your red blood cells. They are liberated from there, to invade the fresh red blood cells. This cycle continues to give you bouts of malarial fever. Some of the parasites get converted into male and female gametes. When an anopheles mosquito bites you, he sucks some male and female malaria gametes. They get combined in the body of mosquito to form the zygotes. These zygotes eventually travel to the salivary gland of the mosquito. There from they are injected in the blood of next host, before the blood is sucked, to give him malaria. Malaria parasites get multiplied in the liver cells of the host, before they attack the red blood cells.
When the female mosquito pricks the skin and sucks up some blood a parasite enters the body and grows within the red blood cells. This is the Malaria parasite and it is this disease that needs to be tackled not necessarily the anopheles mosquito itself. Break the parasite cycle from the host and malaria will disappear. One avenue of research is to kill the parasite in the infected body or render the mosquito infertile by releasing infertile males into their breeding areas. It is extremely difficult to do other wise it would have been achieved already.
The microorganism that causes malaria is called Plasmodium, with several species, such as Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax, being responsible for human infections. Its life cycle involves two hosts: the Anopheles mosquito, which transmits the parasite through its bite, and humans, where the parasite multiplies in the liver and red blood cells. In the mosquito, the sexual reproduction of Plasmodium occurs, leading to the release of sporozoites that infect humans when an infected mosquito bites. The cycle continues as infected humans can transmit the parasite back to mosquitoes.
Malaria is an infectious disease caused by a parasite (of the genus Plasmodium) and spread mostly by a particular mosquito (Anopheles). The saliva from the bite of the infected female mosquito infects the blood which carries the parasite to the liver where it matures. The disease is common in tropical areas of Asia, Africa, and the Americas since these have a favorable environment for the mosquito; mortality rates in severe cases are about one in five. Estimated deaths approximate a million a year, most of which are children. The disease is preventable and treatable through medication; preventative measures include mosquito control techniques.
Plasmodium is a member of the sporozoan group of protists. It is the causative agent of malaria and has a complex life cycle involving both mosquito and human hosts.
malaria is transmitted to someone else if another mosquito sucks the blood of somebody that is infected. after the mosquito goes to bite another person and sends the infectious disease to that personA person gets malaria from the bite of an infected female mosquito. The female Anopheles mosquitoes feed on the human blood to obtain protein they need to develop their eggs. 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.
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.