B. Malaria
Quinine
QUININE
Lots of garlic and Quinine!
Quinine.
quinine
Quinine is a drug used to treat malaria. It is neither a stimulant nor a depressant.
No, there isn't. But there is a preventative medication one can take while in malaria-infested areas to keep the disease from taking hold even if one would get exposed to it.
No quinine is more for malaria. It is an anti-protozoal. Mixing antibiotics with quinine is not the best idea. It increases antibiotics side effects.
Chloroquine and primaquine are antimalarial medications used to treat and prevent malaria. Chloroquine primarily targets the blood stages of the malaria parasite, while primaquine is effective against the liver stages and helps prevent relapses. Quinine, derived from cinchona bark, is used for treating severe malaria and can cause side effects such as cinchonism, which includes symptoms like tinnitus, headache, and nausea. Together, these medications can effectively combat malaria but may have varying side effects and resistance issues.
It has been used to treat malaria (sometimes called "ague" in history), but isn't always effective for it nowadays. (The strains mutate and evolve quickly.)
Quinine is the "drug" from the bark of Cinchona tree that has got antiparasitic properties. It can be used against Malaria.