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Repeated blood meals for mosquitoes can speed development of malaria-causing parasites


Repeated blood meals for mosquitoes can speed development of malaria-causing parasites
An additional feeding on human blood by a mosquito infected with 
Plasmodium falciparum, the parasite that causes malaria, can accelerate the development of the parasite and increase the potential for transmission to humans, according to new research led by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
The study authors said the findings indicate that the potential for malaria transmission is likely higher than previously thought given that female mosquitoes naturally feed multiple times during their lifespans. And if the potential for transmission is higher, that means eliminating the disease in high-burden areas across sub-Saharan Africa could be more difficult than previously estimated, according to the study. ....

Meghan Marquette , Flaminia Catteruccia , Naresh Singh , Caroline Buckee , W Robert Shaw , Douglas Paton , Kristine Werling , Maurice Itoe , Other Harvard Chan School , Department Of Immunology , Saharan Africa , Infectious Diseases , Harvard Chan School , மேகன் மார்க்கெட் , னரேஷ் சிங் , டப்ல்யூ ராபர்ட் ஷா , டக்ளஸ் ப்யாடந் , கிறிஸ்டின் வெர்லிங் , அதர் ஹார்வர்ட் சான் பள்ளி , துறை ஆஃப் நோயெதிர்ப்பு , தொற்று நோய்கள் , ஹார்வர்ட் சான் பள்ளி ,

Multiple blood meals for mosquitoes can speed development of malaria-causing parasites


An additional feeding on human blood by a mosquito infected with
Plasmodium falciparum, the parasite that causes malaria, can accelerate the development of the parasite and increase the potential for transmission to humans, according to new research led by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
The study authors said the findings indicate that the potential for malaria transmission is likely higher than previously thought given that female mosquitoes naturally feed multiple times during their lifespans. And if the potential for transmission is higher, that means eliminating the disease in high-burden areas across sub-Saharan Africa could be more difficult than previously estimated, according to the study. ....

Meghan Marquette , Flaminia Catteruccia , Naresh Singh , Caroline Buckee , W Robert Shaw , Douglas Paton , Kristine Werling , Maurice Itoe , Other Harvard Chan School , Department Of Immunology , Saharan Africa , Infectious Diseases , Harvard Chan School , மேகன் மார்க்கெட் , னரேஷ் சிங் , டப்ல்யூ ராபர்ட் ஷா , டக்ளஸ் ப்யாடந் , கிறிஸ்டின் வெர்லிங் , அதர் ஹார்வர்ட் சான் பள்ளி , துறை ஆஃப் நோயெதிர்ப்பு , தொற்று நோய்கள் , ஹார்வர்ட் சான் பள்ளி ,